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Many people are beginning to realize that the Maui wildfires aren’t just a mere freak of nature or a careless accident. In addition to the silencing of reporters, officials refused to comment on missing kids, along with the downright deadly moves like withholding water and barricading people inside the fire zone, making some wonder if they were trying to create a more outrageous disaster. Why would they do such a thing? As rumors have circulated that Joe Biden is gearing up to unleash a “climate emergency,” some would argue they did this to push a “climate disaster” narrative.

However, is it truly a “climate emergency”, or has the United States been continuously targeted by foreign terrorists, particularly ISIS? President Trump effectively dismantled ISIS, but there are growing suspicions that they may be resurfacing by igniting wildfires throughout the nation. Additionally, our own government shares this belief. In fact, ISIS has actively encouraged their supporters to initiate fires and has even crafted an instructive video guiding them through the process.

Here’s a closeup of the images:

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That particular report was written in 2022 and references the 2020 “wildfire” video threats from ISIS.

DNI:

Foreign terrorist organizations encourage arson attacks in the US because of its perceived simplicity and potential to cause significant and widespread damage. Arson-initiated wildland fires in the US, especially in the west, result in major human, property, infrastructure, environmental, and economic losses. About 40 percent of all US homes are in wildland-urban interface (WUI) b communities according to the US Department of Commerce, putting these communities at greater risk of wildfires. Although most WUI arson incidents in the Homeland resulted in criminal charges unassociated with terrorism, messaging by terrorists may result in acts of arson connected to terrorism.

  • In July 2020, ISIS released an Englishlanguage video titled Incite the Believers that urged supporters to conduct arson attacks in forests, fields, cities, and villages and to safely dispose of evidence to hinder law enforcement investigations.
  • On 20 July 2019, authorities indicted an ISIS supporter in the US who said he wanted to set fire to the Berkeley Hills mountain range in California, a recognized WUI vulnerable to fires.
  • In January 2017, ISIS English-language Rumiyah magazine provided instructions for making improvised incendiary devices and urged supporters to target wildlands and buildings.
  • In May 2012, Al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula’s (AQAP) ninth issue of Inspire magazine offered instructions and suggested materials for building a “timed incendiary device,” or firebomb, and recommended targeting urban areas adjacent to wildlands in order to destroy natural resources, as well as structures and vehicles.

This phenomenon isn’t exclusive to the U.S. Australians face a similar narrative: every time a fire breaks out, the media and the left instantly blame “climate change.” But could it be more plausible that we’re looking at cases of arson terrorism that the left is gleefully cashing in on?

Watch:

Watch:

Foreign arson terrorism goes all the way back to 2006. The DOJ published a paper revealing how terrorists were using fire as an effective way inflict damage, death, and terror. The Palestinians have successfully used arson terrorism against Israel.

DOJ:

Pyro-terrorism is defined as the use of incendiary attacks to intimidate or coerce a government or civilian population. A historical analysis of terrorism indicates that terrorist strategies are incorporating the use of more simplistic destructive methods, like arson. Examples of past terrorist attacks with arson and their devastating impacts are presented, including examples of pyro-terrorism attacks in the United States and abroad, such as the wave of arson attacks experienced by Israel at the hands of the Palestinians in April 2004, which was dubbed “Arson Intifada.” The September 11, 2001, terrorism attack on the World Trade Center is examined in terms of the impact of the improvised incendiary device, the airplanes, on the structural integrity of the buildings. The fire that resulted from the airplanes crashing into the towers softened the integral steel support columns which ultimately resulted in the total collapse of the towers. America’s vulnerabilities to wildfire as a terrorist weapon during past wars are also examined, including the psychological impact pyro-terrorism has had on the American population and the armed forces, whose attention and resources must be averted to controlling fires. The San Diego Fire Storms of 2003 are presented as a contemporary example of current vulnerabilities to wildfire terrorism and the potential for future pyro-terrorism attacks on local populations and regionally based U.S. military forces. Methods to mitigate the threat of pyro-terrorism are considered and include the development of an all-discipline incident management plan to create unity of command.

As we showed you earlier, ISIS laid out an electronic “how to” guide for weaponizing wildfires.

HS Today:

A new video from the Islamic State’s media wing tells followers that arson is the highest-rated of the low-skill terror tactics and encourages fire attacks with the devastation and death toll of the 2018 Camp Fire in California highlighted as an example.

The 4-minute video “Incite the Believers” issued by Al-Hayat Media Center, released in both English and Arabic, shows items such as a power drill and a handgun while noting that would-be jihadists may “look around yourself and you do not find a weapon that you can use to subdue the enemy of Allah.”

Is the United States using ISIS terror attacks to push their climate agenda? The HS Today piece continues:

The video shows animation of a hand marking a spot on a map between San Francisco and Sacramento. The graphic then lights on fire, burning through the California map.

The video also urges arson jihadists to “safely dispose” of evidence after fleeing the scene of their attacks.

A target map at the end of the video suggests forest fires in the western United States, factory blazes in Canada, burning buildings in Europe, and agricultural fires in South America.

ISIS has long promoted arson as a cheap and easy terror tactic, and has put those threats into action in Iraq and Syria – taking advantage of warming temperatures in spring to set natural fuel alight with the intent of sowing fear, economic pain and potentially casualties. ISIS previously claimed in May 2019 that the terror group was behind a series of wildfires: In the ISIS newsletter al-Naba article, “Roll Up Your Sleeves and Begin the Harvest — May Allah Bless What You Reap,” ISIS reminded “soldiers of the caliphate” that they “have before you millions of acres… their plantations, fields and homes, as well as their economic foundation” to burn.

Will we ever uncover the true causes of these wildfires? Most likely not. Nevertheless, what we can absolutely affirm is that these deadly fires were not caused by “climate change.” So, this begs the question: what information is our government hiding and could they be exploiting these tragic events to advance their own objectives? At this point, we wouldn’t put it past them.


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