ISIS will have Yemen

Doer

Well-Known Member
Well, if one is certainly clue less, then one should most certainly get a clue, as soon as possible, as we clued in, well know; or not, if one seems certain to wish to appear clue less, to a certainty.

I am quite sure of this, most cetain, in fact.
 

overgrowem

Well-Known Member
I am ignoring a few people. And you are likely, talking out your ass, again, as well. It is why I asked. You goofs say the funniest things.

And you gave no answer, just the usual clue less.
Clue less is one word, clueless.
 
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althor

Well-Known Member
well, we will be busy bombing empty storage buildings while ISIS parades up and down the street in packs of 1000's just a few streets over.

Biggest joke ever. IS is USA.
 

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
ISIS is a force of 20-30 thousand fighters.

yawn.

be dumber, righties. get more scared. it's what fox news wants.
 

cc2012

Well-Known Member
Islamic State posts pictures of 100 US military on 'kill list'


Islamic State has posted online what it says are the names, US addresses and photos of 100 American military service members, and called upon its "brothers residing in America" to kill them.

The Pentagon said after the information was posted on the Internet that it was investigating the matter. "I can't confirm the validity of the information, but we are looking into it," a US defence official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said on Saturday.

"We always encourage our personnel to exercise appropriate OPSEC (operations security) and force protection procedures," the official added.

In the posting, a group referring to itself as the "Islamic State Hacking Division" wrote in English that it had hacked several military servers, databases and emails and made public the information on 100 members of the US military so that "lone wolf" attackers can kill them.

The New York Times reported that it did not look like the information had been hacked from US government servers and quoted an unnamed Defence Department official as saying most of the information could be found in public records, residential address search sites and social media.

The Times quoted officials as saying the list appeared to have been drawn from personnel mentioned in news articles about air strikes on Islamic State. The group's forces control parts of Syria and Iraq and have been targeted in US-led air strikes.

US officials told the ABC network that the families of those on the list were being notified.

The posting, addressed to disbelievers, Christians and "crusaders" in America, included what the group said were the names, military service branch, photos and street addresses of the individuals. The posting includes the military rank of some but not all of those named.
 
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