@Achill @derpreusse @Glünggi @ThunderBird1 Wenn man Verlauf so anguckt, kann man wirklich nur in hysterisches Gelächter ausbrechen, um Weinkrampf zu verhindern.
Hier ein Artikel von Okt. 2012,
beschrieben wird Eliminierung von Absi, IS-Vertreter, durch Farouk und FSA.
Eines der ersten Morde untereinander, gefolgt von vielen weiteren.
Al-Kaida-nahe und IS-nahe Gruppen sind heillos zerstritten, was sie nicht daran hindert, ab und zu zu kollaborieren..
Jede militante Gruppe sieht sich als wahre Interpreten und ihre Sharia als bestes System!
"Absi had come as an emissary of the Islamic State of Iraq, an al-Qaeda front-group, to establish an Islamic emirate in Syria.
..
Absi’s assassination was not the first time the Jihadis have killed one of their own.
According to reports coming from Idlib and Aleppo obtained by sources in the Syrian opposition, clashes between Islamist militant groups have become more frequent as they compete for power and influence,
each one asserting that their religious interpretation is the only true path.
There also appears to be a cultural clash between non-Arab Muslims from Pakistan, Afghanistan, the Balkans and Chechnya on the one hand, and Arabs from Syria, Libya, Tunisia and Jordan on the other, over the exploitation of sex slaves.
Some Islamists consider these women to be spoils of war, especially the wives and daughters of regime supporters, but local fighters are more apprehensive about the issue. Dozens of women have reportedly been sexually assaulted.
Others within the movement have firmly stood up to these groups and rejected such practices. For one thing, they believe that this will turn sympathetic Syrians against them.
These power struggles play out over a number of issues, but a trend has emerged of justifying assassinations by accusing the target of collaborating with the regime.
The result of this fracturing is that Syria is being divided into territories controlled by rival militant groups that dare not cross into another area without expecting a bloody confrontation. "
http://english.al-akhbar.com/node/12796 (Archiv-Version vom 14.08.2014)"Governor of Aleppo – Abu Atheer al-Absi
Real name: Unknown
Younger brother of Firas al-Absi (also known as Sheikh Abu Mohammed
al-Absi), who was assassinated by Kataib al-Farouq in
Syria in August 2012. Some reports claim Abu Atheer may have
been redeployed elsewhere, possibly to Homs."
http://www.brookings.edu/~/media/Research/Files/Reports/2014/11/profiling%20islamic%20state%20lister/en_whos_who.pdf (Archiv-Version vom 05.02.2015)Absis Bruder war zeitlang Bürgermeister von IS-beherrschtem Teil Aleppo.
Übrigens, interessant über Entstehung IS
"In a new Brookings Doha Center Analysis Paper, Charles Lister traces IS’s roots from Jordan to Afghanistan, and finally to Iraq and Syria. He describes its evolution from a small terrorist group into a bureaucratic organization that currently controls thousands of square miles and is attempting to govern millions of people. Lister assesses the group’s capabilities, explains its various tactics, and identifies its likely trajectory."
http://www.brookings.edu/research/reports2/2014/12/profiling-islamic-state-lister (Archiv-Version vom 09.01.2015)