Special Guests
"For Special Talk Shows Like Yours!"

www.specialguests.com
Phone: 630-848-0750

Printer Friendly

BAGHDAD BOMINGS KILL 120 : Hundreds more wounded in Jihadist Mass Murder

Image

Muslim Jihadist mass murderers just killed more than 120 innocent people, injuring hundreds more.

Why does this killing occur and why does there appear to be no end in sight?

Conducting Talk Show interviews on this topic is Walid Shoebat, a former Palestinian Jihadist, who has since converted to Christianity and is making amends for his former ways by getting the message out that Islam is NOT a religion of peace, and is warning the world about a religion that wants to kill or convert every last soul on earth.

Is this not ‘politically correct’ enough? Perhaps we should refer to these mass murderers as mere ‘extremists’ or token ‘terrorists’? Perhaps, but they are also Muslim Jihadists whose ‘holy’ book commands them to kill or convert everyone in order to achieve world ‘peace.’

During your interview, Walid shares with your audience the mindset of Muslims as only an ex-Muslim can. Walid is the author of numerous books and articles, including two new books, “Why We Want to Kill You” and “God’s War on Terror.” Please help spread the light by allowing Walid to let Muslims know there is a better way and a way out of their death cult.

ABOUT WALID SHOEBAT…

Born in Bethlehem, Walid's grandfather was the Muslim Mukhtar (chieftain) of Beit Sahour-Bethlehem (The Shepherd's Fields) and a friend of Haj-Ameen Al-Husseni, the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem and notorious friend of Adolf Hitler.

As a young man, he became a member of the Palestinian Liberation Organization, and participated in acts of terror and violence against Israel, and was later imprisoned in the Russian Compound, Jerusalem's central prison for incitement and violence against Israel.

After his release, he continued his life of violence and rioting in Bethlehem and the Temple Mount. After entering the U.S, he worked as a counselor for the Arab Student Organization at Loop College in Chicago and continued his anti-Israel activities.

In 1993, Walid studied the Bible in a challenge to convert his wife to Islam. Six months later, after intense study, Walid realized that everything he had been taught about Jews was a lie. Convinced he was on the side of evil, he became an advocate for his former enemy.

Driven by a deep passion to heal his own soul, and to bring the truth about the Jews, Israel and the threat of fundamentalist Islam to the world, Walid shed his former life and his work as a software engineer and set out to tirelessly bring the cause against the evil of Islamic Fundamentalist to tens of millions of people throughout the world: churches, synagogues, civic groups, government leaders and media.

Walid is the author of several bestselling books including “Why I Left Jihad,” “Why We Want To Kill You” and “God’s War on Terror.”

Walid is an American citizen and lives in the USA with his wife and children, under this assumed name. Walid has spoken all over America and the world including Chile, Mexico, Canada, UK, and South Africa. He has appeared on national television also all over the world including CNN, CNN International, FOX News, ITN, RTE, NBC, CBS, and ABC and ABC Australia. He has also been featured on BBC radio 4, 5 and the largest radio audience on the BBC World Service reaching 180 million people.

Walid has the unique insight so as people can now fully understand the issue of terrorism from the perspective of someone who was once a terrorist.

Walid Shoebat Speaking Highlights:
Harvard Law School lecture
Columbia University lecture
Oxford University UK
National Constitution Center
Capitol Hill
UCLA, USC, University of Georgia, Washington University, Penn State, San Diego State and many others.

Walid Shoebat has also been featured in Christian media:
700 Club (twice), Benny Hinn, TBN, Zola Levitt Ministries, Crosstalk, Janet Parshall, Jewish Voice Ministries and many more.


THE FOLLOWING ARTCILE MAY BE HELPFUL IN SHOW PREP:

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL/ DECEMBER 8, 2009, 11:20 A.M. ET.

Scores Killed as Blasts Shake Baghdad
By Chip Cummins

Several large explosions rocked Baghdad midmorning Tuesday, with officials reporting more than 100 dead after at least three car bombs detonated at several sites across the capital. Residents said they heard a large explosion shortly after 10:30 a.m. local time, followed by at least two more blasts. By midafternoon Tuesday, officials were reporting five separate explosions in the capital.

Key Events in Iraq Track major developments in the U.S. involvement in Iraq, day-by-day. Seven Children Killed at Bombed Baghdad School1:29Seven children have been killed and 42 people wounded in an attack on an all-boys school in a Shi'ite district of Baghdad. The bomb exploded just as middle-school pupils were leaving school at the end of the day. Video courtesy of Reuters.

The intensity of the blasts and their quick succession -- some spaced just minutes apart -- suggested a coordinated bombing campaign.

Iraqi officials said at least 112 people had been killed in the bombings, and close to 200 injured. Those numbers could climb significantly as security and emergency services officials get a better handle on the scope of the attacks.

The bombing follows a string of similar, high-profile attacks in Baghdad, and it comes just days after Iraqi parliamentarians agreed on a long-stalled election law, setting the stage for national elections early next year. It also comes ahead of this weekend's planned oil auction in Baghdad, in which the government is expected to award rights to develop some of Iraq's large, untapped fields to foreign oil companies.

U.S. and Iraqi officials have pointed to the planned elections and the oil-bidding round as symbols of a new sense of stability in Iraq. But Tuesday's attack -- following so closely on the heels of two other bombings that targeted pillars of the federal government in recent months -- has again shaken confidence in Iraq's security services, just as U.S. forces plan a large-scale military drawdown next near.

Two previous attacks -- one in August and one in October -- triggered major security overhauls by the government and Iraq's military. In the aftermath of both attacks, U.S. forces offered assistance to Iraqi officials, after being asked by Baghdad for limited help in responding.

It wasn't clear if U.S. forces were asked to help again Tuesday. American military helicopters hovered over some of the bomb sites, as clouds of black smoke billowed over Baghdad's skyline.

In August, coordinated bombings targeted the ministries of foreign affairs and finance, killing more than 100, and marking the bloodiest single day in Iraq all year. In late October, two blasts, including one detonated outside the city's municipal headquarters, killed more than 150. That was the deadliest attack in more than two years.

Both attacks triggered accusations by the government that insurgents were trying to stoke sectarian tensions ahead of next year's polls. The government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has blamed Saddam Hussein sympathizers, remnants of the late dictator's Baath Party, Syria and extremist groups linked to al Qaeda for complicity in the two earlier attacks. But officials so far haven't brought anyone to justice, instead firing or investigating dozens of security service officials blamed for letting their guard down around the targeted buildings. Several ministries and government agencies have stepped up security amid the recent attacks. Before Tuesday's blasts, the Iraqi oil ministry said it would tighten security ahead of this weekend's oil-licensing round.

Government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh said Tuesday's attacks appeared to be linked to Baath Party remnants and al Qaeda, but gave no evidence to support those charges. "It is a message for the election," he said. After Parliament agreed on election legislation over the weekend, Iraq's three-member presidential council Tuesday set March 6 as the date for the polls. Mr. Dabbagh said Tuesday's blast wouldn't affect the timing of the vote or the weekend oil auction.

The violence comes as general security across Iraq has improved significantly, since the worst days of Iraq's sectarian-tinged bloodshed in 2006 and 2007. American officials are counting on those security gains to hold as they prepare to withdraw American combat forces by next August, turning over most security duties to Iraqis. U.S. forces are required to leave Iraq completely by the end of 2011.

There were conflicting reports early Tuesday about the number and location of the attacks. State-run radio initially reported one attack occurred outside Baghdad's fine-arts institute and another one blew up at a busy intersection in the Mansour neighborhood. Officials told the Associated Press midday Tuesday that one blast detonated at or near the Ministry of Labor, while another blast exploded near the site of temporary offices for finance ministry employees. They had been working at the site after the Ministry of Finance itself was heavily damaged in the August attack.

Another bomb detonated near a training institute for judges in Baghdad's Waziriya neighborhood, according to eyewitnesses, who reported dozens of burning cars around the blast. Officials said at least three of the attacks were confirmed as car bombings.

Copyright ©2009 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

To schedule an interview with this guest, call: 630-848-0750 or fill out the Do-It-Yourself Booking Form.
Return to the Special Guests homepage


©1996-2009 SpecialGuests.com™