Zionists behind Oslo terror: Iran Cmdr. - Islamic Invitation Turkey
FeaturedIranWest AsiaWorld News

Zionists behind Oslo terror: Iran Cmdr.


Top Iranian commander Hassan Firouzabadi says Zionists are behind recent Norway terrorism as they fuel rightist sentiments and foster terrorism for personal gain.

The Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff of Iran’s Armed Forces said on Saturday that people in the West need to be aware of the Zionist agenda as the group is ‘toying with people of the world in pursuit of their objectives,” the Armed Forces information office reported in a press release.

Major General Firouzabadi’s comments come on the heels of recent attacks by Norwegian terrorist Anders Behring Breivik who has revealed in his confessions that he sought to send a strong signal with the July 22 attacks that killed scores of people.

Breivik claimed that he had carried out the attacks to save Europe from what he called the “Islamization” of the continent, the Norwegian daily Aftenposten reported.

Maj. Gen. Firouzabadi further pointed out that when the Zionist regime [Israel] feels downbeat and defeated, it attempts to create deviations within Christianity and spread “Christian Zionism” which the world needs to be on the alert for.

The Norwegian terrorist has said there are tens of far-right terror cells ready to overthrow European governments that tolerate Islam.

Breivik, who claimed responsibility for the recent terrorist violence in Norway, has noted that he is only one of about 80 like-minded extremist cells throughout the west of Europe, which are ready to carry out similar violent attacks.

He made the remarks in a 1,500-page handbook he emailed to some 5,700 people just hours before the twin attacks that left at least 76 people dead in Norway.

The title of the handbook is “2083: A European Declaration of Independence.”

Elsewhere in the handbook, he further reveals links with British far-right groups, noting that he was recruited in a meeting in London in 2002.

His Islamophobic and anti-multiculturalist remarks echo statements already made by European leaders, including British Prime Minister David Cameron, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, French President Nicholas Sarkozy, and the Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi on the failure of multiculturalism to hold culturally different communities together.

On July 22, a massive bomb explosion rocked government headquarters in Oslo, killing eight people and leaving several more injured.

On the same day, a gunman opened fire on members of the youth wing of Norway’s Labor Party on nearby Utoeya Island, killing 68 people.

Back to top button