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Sarah Adams

@TPASarah368,439 subscribers

10% Humanitarian/90% Warlord - Terrorist Whisperer - Author of Benghazi: Know Thy Enemy @benghaziattacks - CIA Alum 🥷 - Khyber’s Dog Mom 🦮 - Keep it Lagom

Shorts

Al‑Qaeda Isn’t Finished. They’re Intent on Turning Past Failures into Success. One of the most important things people miss about al‑Qaeda is this: They don’t abandon failed plots. They recycle them. Their current U.S. homeland strategy is built on bringing old failures back, and this time, making them succeed. Look at the pattern: They hit the World Trade Center in 1993 and failed to bring it down. Eight years later, they came back and finished the job. The same mindset applies to everything else al‑Qaeda tried and couldn’t pull off: Project Bojinka was the original blueprint for using commercial aviation as a weapon. Parts of it failed in the 1990s. They brought the idea back and used it to build 9/11. They still believe Bojinka must be completed. That is why the aviation plot is back. None of these ideas are over. The group’s current U.S. homeland plot is not new, it is simply being fulfilled by the next generation of al-Qaeda. It is a direct extension of what they attempted before, only now they intend to turn every past failure into a success. Yes, you read that right. Every. Single. One. Abu Bakr Naji, al‑Qaeda strategist and doctrinal advisor, author of The Management of Savagery, believed failure was part of a longer-term strategy, not a terminal endpoint. In his framework, setbacks aren’t the end of jihad, just a step in escalation, refinement, and eventual success. He wrote: “If we fail—we seek refuge with God from that—it does not mean an end of the matter. Rather, this failure will lead to an increase in savagery.” Understanding this is key: the next attack will hit harder. Our intelligence community knows how each plot failed before. So why can’t they thwart them now?

Al‑Qaeda Isn’t Finished. They’re Intent on Turning Past Failures into Success. One of the most important things people miss about al‑Qaeda is this: They don’t abandon failed plots. They recycle them. Their current U.S. homeland strategy is built on bringing old failures back, and this time, making them succeed. Look at the pattern: They hit the World Trade Center in 1993 and failed to bring it down. Eight years later, they came back and finished the job. The same mindset applies to everything else al‑Qaeda tried and couldn’t pull off: Project Bojinka was the original blueprint for using commercial aviation as a weapon. Parts of it failed in the 1990s. They brought the idea back and used it to build 9/11. They still believe Bojinka must be completed. That is why the aviation plot is back. None of these ideas are over. The group’s current U.S. homeland plot is not new, it is simply being fulfilled by the next generation of al-Qaeda. It is a direct extension of what they attempted before, only now they intend to turn every past failure into a success. Yes, you read that right. Every. Single. One. Abu Bakr Naji, al‑Qaeda strategist and doctrinal advisor, author of The Management of Savagery, believed failure was part of a longer-term strategy, not a terminal endpoint. In his framework, setbacks aren’t the end of jihad, just a step in escalation, refinement, and eventual success. He wrote: “If we fail—we seek refuge with God from that—it does not mean an end of the matter. Rather, this failure will lead to an increase in savagery.” Understanding this is key: the next attack will hit harder. Our intelligence community knows how each plot failed before. So why can’t they thwart them now?

93,303 Aufrufe

Exposing the Taliban’s ISKP Deception Day 7: Taliban’s Infighting Over Brown Sugar Labeled as an ISIS Operation On June 11, 2022, Taliban terrorist spokespersons Zabihullah Mujahid and Inamullah Samangani claimed that the GDI (the Taliban’s wannabe CIA) had successfully eliminated eight ISIS terrorists in an operation in Taloqan, the capital of Takhar province, Afghanistan. They alleged the operation targeted an ISIS financing and equipment hub in the area. Eyewitnesses, however, quickly refuted this narrative, reporting that those killed were innocent, unarmed civilians from Takhar with no connection to ISIS. So, what really happened? The actual confrontation was between two Taliban factions. A 60-kg heroin shipment, transported by Taliban members from Badakhshan province to Takhar, was ambushed by rival Taliban members collaborating with the GDI. This internal clash left not only the eight locals dead (displayed in the provided video) and twelve residents injured, but caused significant damage to nearby homes and businesses. Yup, no ISIS, anywhere in the real story. For the past seven days, we’ve laid bare the Taliban’s sham narrative of combating ISIS. The so-called “counterterrorism operations” that U.S. taxpayers fund are nothing more than a convenient cover for their internal power struggles and atrocities against civilians. The next time someone—whether on social media or at the Pentagon—tries to sell you the story of the Taliban fighting ISIS, push back on that nonsense. Don’t let the Taliban's misinformation stand. We do not have to play the fools to terrorist narratives. It is also well past time that we end the U.S. Government's intelligence-sharing relationship with the Taliban! They are the enemy!

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Exposing the Taliban’s ISKP Deception Day 7: Taliban’s Infighting Over Brown Sugar Labeled as an ISIS Operation On June 11, 2022, Taliban terrorist spokespersons Zabihullah Mujahid and Inamullah Samangani claimed that the GDI (the Taliban’s wannabe CIA) had successfully eliminated eight ISIS terrorists in an operation in Taloqan, the capital of Takhar province, Afghanistan. They alleged the operation targeted an ISIS financing and equipment hub in the area. Eyewitnesses, however, quickly refuted this narrative, reporting that those killed were innocent, unarmed civilians from Takhar with no connection to ISIS. So, what really happened? The actual confrontation was between two Taliban factions. A 60-kg heroin shipment, transported by Taliban members from Badakhshan province to Takhar, was ambushed by rival Taliban members collaborating with the GDI. This internal clash left not only the eight locals dead (displayed in the provided video) and twelve residents injured, but caused significant damage to nearby homes and businesses. Yup, no ISIS, anywhere in the real story. For the past seven days, we’ve laid bare the Taliban’s sham narrative of combating ISIS. The so-called “counterterrorism operations” that U.S. taxpayers fund are nothing more than a convenient cover for their internal power struggles and atrocities against civilians. The next time someone—whether on social media or at the Pentagon—tries to sell you the story of the Taliban fighting ISIS, push back on that nonsense. Don’t let the Taliban's misinformation stand. We do not have to play the fools to terrorist narratives. It is also well past time that we end the U.S. Government's intelligence-sharing relationship with the Taliban! They are the enemy!

45,390 Aufrufe

Exposing the Taliban’s ISKP Deception Day 6: How the Taliban Masked a Massacre as Counterterrorism On March 10, 2023, in Balkh Province, Taliban police claimed they had successfully eliminated eight members of ISKP during an operation in the 7th district of Balkh. According to their report, the operation began at 3:30 a.m. and resulted in ISKP deaths, the seizure of ammunition, and the confiscation of three Toyota Corollas. The Taliban also claimed that two of their terrorists were wounded in the clash. However, the Taliban’s narrative quickly unraveled, as the individuals killed in the operation were identified by locals as innocent civilians, not ISKP affiliates (video included of the massacre). Half of the victims were employees of a construction company, including former security forces allied with the U.S., who were targeted under the guise of being ISKP. Families of the victims protested publicly, with their voices amplified across social media and even on Taliban-affiliated TOLO news (broadcast included). The operation occurred just two days after the assassination of Taliban's Governor for Balkh, Dawood Muzammil, raising speculation that the Taliban carried out this brutal act to project an image of control and to perpetuate the illusion of being effective against ISKP threats. This incident is yet another in a long pattern of the Taliban eliminating innocents under the pretense of combating ISKP, all in a bid to maintain its dubious counterterrorism relationship with the U.S. government. Far from being a reliable partner in the fight against terrorism, the Taliban perpetuates a cycle of violence against those who once served their country, allied with U.S. forces, or posed no threat at all. This is the so-called ISKP "fight" that U.S. taxpayers continue to bankroll.

Sensitive content

Exposing the Taliban’s ISKP Deception Day 6: How the Taliban Masked a Massacre as Counterterrorism On March 10, 2023, in Balkh Province, Taliban police claimed they had successfully eliminated eight members of ISKP during an operation in the 7th district of Balkh. According to their report, the operation began at 3:30 a.m. and resulted in ISKP deaths, the seizure of ammunition, and the confiscation of three Toyota Corollas. The Taliban also claimed that two of their terrorists were wounded in the clash. However, the Taliban’s narrative quickly unraveled, as the individuals killed in the operation were identified by locals as innocent civilians, not ISKP affiliates (video included of the massacre). Half of the victims were employees of a construction company, including former security forces allied with the U.S., who were targeted under the guise of being ISKP. Families of the victims protested publicly, with their voices amplified across social media and even on Taliban-affiliated TOLO news (broadcast included). The operation occurred just two days after the assassination of Taliban's Governor for Balkh, Dawood Muzammil, raising speculation that the Taliban carried out this brutal act to project an image of control and to perpetuate the illusion of being effective against ISKP threats. This incident is yet another in a long pattern of the Taliban eliminating innocents under the pretense of combating ISKP, all in a bid to maintain its dubious counterterrorism relationship with the U.S. government. Far from being a reliable partner in the fight against terrorism, the Taliban perpetuates a cycle of violence against those who once served their country, allied with U.S. forces, or posed no threat at all. This is the so-called ISKP "fight" that U.S. taxpayers continue to bankroll.

44,373 Aufrufe

Videos

Exposing the Taliban’s ISKP Deception Day 5: A Deadly Warning—Do Not Travel to Afghanistan, Even for a Wedding Viewer Discretion Advised: Contains Evidence of War Crimes The Taliban’s fake counterterrorism operations, carried out under the guise of combating ISKP, amount to war crimes—and it’s time we call them what they are. Today’s post is a stark reminder to all to not travel to Afghanistan under any circumstances, even for something as simple as a family wedding. The Taliban will not hesitate to frame innocent people as terrorists to stage their sham operations and maintain U.S. financial support. The details: On November 2, 2023, the Taliban brutally killed three young men, later claiming they were ISKP fighters plotting to attack the Taliban governor of Balkh province. In reality, these men were returning to a family home in Balkh after attending a family wedding in Jowzjan province. The victims were: Ahmad Fahim and Esah Khan, who had traveled from India, where they worked as interpreters for Afghan medical patients. Asadullah, who came from Tajikistan, where he owned a small business. These men had no ties to ISKP or any other terrorist entity. Even in the video, the Taliban's own fighters seem surprised that there are no weapons in the vehicle. This of course didn’t stop them from labeling these three as terrorists though. This is not counterterrorism—it’s murder, deception, and a blatant violation of international law. It’s also a sobering reminder of how far the Taliban will go to maintain an official relationship with the U.S. government. Every day we remain silent as our taxpayer dollars fund the murder of innocents to support a fabricated fight against ISIS, the more complicit we become.
1:18

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Exposing the Taliban’s ISKP Deception Day 5: A Deadly Warning—Do Not Travel to Afghanistan, Even for a Wedding Viewer Discretion Advised: Contains Evidence of War Crimes The Taliban’s fake counterterrorism operations, carried out under the guise of combating ISKP, amount to war crimes—and it’s time we call them what they are. Today’s post is a stark reminder to all to not travel to Afghanistan under any circumstances, even for something as simple as a family wedding. The Taliban will not hesitate to frame innocent people as terrorists to stage their sham operations and maintain U.S. financial support. The details: On November 2, 2023, the Taliban brutally killed three young men, later claiming they were ISKP fighters plotting to attack the Taliban governor of Balkh province. In reality, these men were returning to a family home in Balkh after attending a family wedding in Jowzjan province. The victims were: Ahmad Fahim and Esah Khan, who had traveled from India, where they worked as interpreters for Afghan medical patients. Asadullah, who came from Tajikistan, where he owned a small business. These men had no ties to ISKP or any other terrorist entity. Even in the video, the Taliban's own fighters seem surprised that there are no weapons in the vehicle. This of course didn’t stop them from labeling these three as terrorists though. This is not counterterrorism—it’s murder, deception, and a blatant violation of international law. It’s also a sobering reminder of how far the Taliban will go to maintain an official relationship with the U.S. government. Every day we remain silent as our taxpayer dollars fund the murder of innocents to support a fabricated fight against ISIS, the more complicit we become.

Sarah Adams

57,209 Aufrufe • vor 1 Jahr

Exposing the Taliban’s ISKP Deception Day 8: The Continued Framing of Innocents—When ISIS Doesn’t Work, Try Kidnappers On December 17, 2023, four individuals—Abdul Aleem, Jamaluddin, Khwaja Younus, and Nusratullah—former members of Afghanistan’s security forces who had been deported from Iran, were targeted and executed by Taliban's GDI in the Company area of Kabul’s PD5. Video evidence (shared here) reveals these men were killed before they even had the chance to change out of the clothes they traveled from Iran in. The Taliban wasted no time accusing the victims of being affiliated with ISIS, despite consistent testimonies from their families and local residents affirming that the men were unarmed and had no connections to ISIS or any other group. When the families and residents protested the killings, the Taliban’s propaganda machine shifted narratives releasing content abandoning their standard ISIS claim and instead accusing two of the victims of being kidnappers. Yet, as expected, they provided no evidence—no weapons, no proof of abduction, nothing to substantiate their story. This second attempt at justifying the crime failed to gain credibility, but the Taliban quickly silenced local dissent through intimidation and threats, effectively forcing residents to stop discussing the incident publicly. This event is yet another example of the Taliban’s disturbing pattern of targeting former members of Afghanistan’s security services and framing them as ISIS operatives. These fake operations serve the Taliban’s dual objectives: projecting a façade of effective counterterrorism efforts against ISIS to maintain its relationship with the Department of Defense and U.S. Intelligence Community and securing continued funding under the guise of fighting terrorism—funding that ultimately originates from U.S. taxpayers. Every one of these examples underscores the extremes the Taliban will go to sustain its deception. They commit war crimes—crimes that we inadvertently fund—to maintain their grip on power and to reap the financial benefits of 'joint' counterterrorism efforts with our government.
0:21

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Exposing the Taliban’s ISKP Deception Day 8: The Continued Framing of Innocents—When ISIS Doesn’t Work, Try Kidnappers On December 17, 2023, four individuals—Abdul Aleem, Jamaluddin, Khwaja Younus, and Nusratullah—former members of Afghanistan’s security forces who had been deported from Iran, were targeted and executed by Taliban's GDI in the Company area of Kabul’s PD5. Video evidence (shared here) reveals these men were killed before they even had the chance to change out of the clothes they traveled from Iran in. The Taliban wasted no time accusing the victims of being affiliated with ISIS, despite consistent testimonies from their families and local residents affirming that the men were unarmed and had no connections to ISIS or any other group. When the families and residents protested the killings, the Taliban’s propaganda machine shifted narratives releasing content abandoning their standard ISIS claim and instead accusing two of the victims of being kidnappers. Yet, as expected, they provided no evidence—no weapons, no proof of abduction, nothing to substantiate their story. This second attempt at justifying the crime failed to gain credibility, but the Taliban quickly silenced local dissent through intimidation and threats, effectively forcing residents to stop discussing the incident publicly. This event is yet another example of the Taliban’s disturbing pattern of targeting former members of Afghanistan’s security services and framing them as ISIS operatives. These fake operations serve the Taliban’s dual objectives: projecting a façade of effective counterterrorism efforts against ISIS to maintain its relationship with the Department of Defense and U.S. Intelligence Community and securing continued funding under the guise of fighting terrorism—funding that ultimately originates from U.S. taxpayers. Every one of these examples underscores the extremes the Taliban will go to sustain its deception. They commit war crimes—crimes that we inadvertently fund—to maintain their grip on power and to reap the financial benefits of 'joint' counterterrorism efforts with our government.

Sarah Adams

52,855 Aufrufe • vor 1 Jahr

Exposing the Taliban’s ISKP Deception Day 7: Taliban’s Infighting Over Brown Sugar Labeled as an ISIS Operation On June 11, 2022, Taliban terrorist spokespersons Zabihullah Mujahid and Inamullah Samangani claimed that the GDI (the Taliban’s wannabe CIA) had successfully eliminated eight ISIS terrorists in an operation in Taloqan, the capital of Takhar province, Afghanistan. They alleged the operation targeted an ISIS financing and equipment hub in the area. Eyewitnesses, however, quickly refuted this narrative, reporting that those killed were innocent, unarmed civilians from Takhar with no connection to ISIS. So, what really happened? The actual confrontation was between two Taliban factions. A 60-kg heroin shipment, transported by Taliban members from Badakhshan province to Takhar, was ambushed by rival Taliban members collaborating with the GDI. This internal clash left not only the eight locals dead (displayed in the provided video) and twelve residents injured, but caused significant damage to nearby homes and businesses. Yup, no ISIS, anywhere in the real story. For the past seven days, we’ve laid bare the Taliban’s sham narrative of combating ISIS. The so-called “counterterrorism operations” that U.S. taxpayers fund are nothing more than a convenient cover for their internal power struggles and atrocities against civilians. The next time someone—whether on social media or at the Pentagon—tries to sell you the story of the Taliban fighting ISIS, push back on that nonsense. Don’t let the Taliban's misinformation stand. We do not have to play the fools to terrorist narratives. It is also well past time that we end the U.S. Government's intelligence-sharing relationship with the Taliban! They are the enemy!
0:07

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TPASarah's profile picture

Exposing the Taliban’s ISKP Deception Day 7: Taliban’s Infighting Over Brown Sugar Labeled as an ISIS Operation On June 11, 2022, Taliban terrorist spokespersons Zabihullah Mujahid and Inamullah Samangani claimed that the GDI (the Taliban’s wannabe CIA) had successfully eliminated eight ISIS terrorists in an operation in Taloqan, the capital of Takhar province, Afghanistan. They alleged the operation targeted an ISIS financing and equipment hub in the area. Eyewitnesses, however, quickly refuted this narrative, reporting that those killed were innocent, unarmed civilians from Takhar with no connection to ISIS. So, what really happened? The actual confrontation was between two Taliban factions. A 60-kg heroin shipment, transported by Taliban members from Badakhshan province to Takhar, was ambushed by rival Taliban members collaborating with the GDI. This internal clash left not only the eight locals dead (displayed in the provided video) and twelve residents injured, but caused significant damage to nearby homes and businesses. Yup, no ISIS, anywhere in the real story. For the past seven days, we’ve laid bare the Taliban’s sham narrative of combating ISIS. The so-called “counterterrorism operations” that U.S. taxpayers fund are nothing more than a convenient cover for their internal power struggles and atrocities against civilians. The next time someone—whether on social media or at the Pentagon—tries to sell you the story of the Taliban fighting ISIS, push back on that nonsense. Don’t let the Taliban's misinformation stand. We do not have to play the fools to terrorist narratives. It is also well past time that we end the U.S. Government's intelligence-sharing relationship with the Taliban! They are the enemy!

Sarah Adams

45,390 Aufrufe • vor 1 Jahr

Exposing the Taliban’s ISKP Deception Day 6: How the Taliban Masked a Massacre as Counterterrorism On March 10, 2023, in Balkh Province, Taliban police claimed they had successfully eliminated eight members of ISKP during an operation in the 7th district of Balkh. According to their report, the operation began at 3:30 a.m. and resulted in ISKP deaths, the seizure of ammunition, and the confiscation of three Toyota Corollas. The Taliban also claimed that two of their terrorists were wounded in the clash. However, the Taliban’s narrative quickly unraveled, as the individuals killed in the operation were identified by locals as innocent civilians, not ISKP affiliates (video included of the massacre). Half of the victims were employees of a construction company, including former security forces allied with the U.S., who were targeted under the guise of being ISKP. Families of the victims protested publicly, with their voices amplified across social media and even on Taliban-affiliated TOLO news (broadcast included). The operation occurred just two days after the assassination of Taliban's Governor for Balkh, Dawood Muzammil, raising speculation that the Taliban carried out this brutal act to project an image of control and to perpetuate the illusion of being effective against ISKP threats. This incident is yet another in a long pattern of the Taliban eliminating innocents under the pretense of combating ISKP, all in a bid to maintain its dubious counterterrorism relationship with the U.S. government. Far from being a reliable partner in the fight against terrorism, the Taliban perpetuates a cycle of violence against those who once served their country, allied with U.S. forces, or posed no threat at all. This is the so-called ISKP "fight" that U.S. taxpayers continue to bankroll.
1:08

Sensitive content

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TPASarah's profile picture

Exposing the Taliban’s ISKP Deception Day 6: How the Taliban Masked a Massacre as Counterterrorism On March 10, 2023, in Balkh Province, Taliban police claimed they had successfully eliminated eight members of ISKP during an operation in the 7th district of Balkh. According to their report, the operation began at 3:30 a.m. and resulted in ISKP deaths, the seizure of ammunition, and the confiscation of three Toyota Corollas. The Taliban also claimed that two of their terrorists were wounded in the clash. However, the Taliban’s narrative quickly unraveled, as the individuals killed in the operation were identified by locals as innocent civilians, not ISKP affiliates (video included of the massacre). Half of the victims were employees of a construction company, including former security forces allied with the U.S., who were targeted under the guise of being ISKP. Families of the victims protested publicly, with their voices amplified across social media and even on Taliban-affiliated TOLO news (broadcast included). The operation occurred just two days after the assassination of Taliban's Governor for Balkh, Dawood Muzammil, raising speculation that the Taliban carried out this brutal act to project an image of control and to perpetuate the illusion of being effective against ISKP threats. This incident is yet another in a long pattern of the Taliban eliminating innocents under the pretense of combating ISKP, all in a bid to maintain its dubious counterterrorism relationship with the U.S. government. Far from being a reliable partner in the fight against terrorism, the Taliban perpetuates a cycle of violence against those who once served their country, allied with U.S. forces, or posed no threat at all. This is the so-called ISKP "fight" that U.S. taxpayers continue to bankroll.

Sarah Adams

44,373 Aufrufe • vor 1 Jahr

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