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US State Department expresses ‘concern’ over Saudi sentencing of ISIS sympathizer, calls him an ‘aid worker’

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Biden’s handlers are so bent on appeasing the Islamic Republic of Iran that they appear increasingly willing and even eager to throw the Saudis to the wolves. The Saudis have a human rights record as abysmal as Iran’s, and are just as much built on Sharia as a society, but they’re in an alliance of convenience with the U.S. right now and are not screaming “Death to America” or aiding jihad terror groups worldwide. In the game of realpolitik they’re playing, Biden’s handlers are once again making the wrong choice.

“US State Dept refers to Saudi ISIS sympathizer sentenced to prison as ‘aid worker,’” by Reem Krimly and Tamara Abueish, Al Arabiya, April 10, 2021 (thanks to Henry):

The United States State Department on Tuesday issued a statement saying it was concerned about the sentencing of a Saudi Arabian citizen known to be an ISIS sympathizer, referring to him as an “aid worker.”

“We are concerned by reports that a Saudi counterterrorism court sentenced Saudi aid worker Abdulrahman al-Sadhan to 20 years in prison followed by a 20-year travel ban,” a statement by Ned Price, US State Department spokesperson read.

Dozens of people on social media, including two Saudi royals, pointed out that al-Sadhan is an ISIS sympathizer and not an aid worker.

Tweets belonging to al-Sadhan under the Twitter handle (@Sama7ti) showed that he is an avid supporter of the extremist group and often called for attacks on Saudi Arabia and other countries by ISIS.

“The participation of Saudi Arabia, Jordan, and others in the airstrike against ISIS gives the state [ISIS] all the justifications to storm these countries, and their storming will not be described as an attack,” al-Sadhan said in a 2014 tweet.

“When do you intend to come to Saudi Arabia? We have a lot [of people] that need to be slaughtered,” al-Sadhan also tweeted in 2014, in response to a now-suspended ISIS-backed Twitter account.

Referring to ISIS fighters as “mujahideen,” al-Sadhan also expressed excitement at the possibility of the terrorist group “liberating” the region.

“Iraq has the most and the largest camps in the region with billions of equipment, most of which fell into the hands of the mujahideen… It is sufficient enough to liberate the entire Arab region. Allah is the greatest,” he tweeted in 2014.

Prince Talal al-Faisal also shared tweets by al-Sadhan in which the latter called for ISIS and others to launch attacks on countries in the Middle East to publish the personal information of Saudi Arabian security personnel.

“Actions have consequences. This supposed “aid worker” called for the publishing of the personal information (phone number/address/license plate number) of security personnel, which ultimately led to the killing of Col. Kitab Al Hammadi,” al-Faisal said.

Saudi Prince Abdulrahman bin Mosaad said that if the Kingdom does not crackdown on “the likes of al-Sadhan,” it would be enabling hundreds of ISIS sympathizers to spew violence and possibly carry out terrorist attacks in the region.

“Abdulrahman al-Sadhan, who writes on Twitter under the name Sama7ti has tweets that explicitly support ISIS, adopts its ideology and promotes it,” bin Mosaad said.

He also called out US hypocrisy, stating that Washington would hold Saudi Arabia accountable if al-Sadhan had carried out terrorist attacks, but has condemned the Kingdom for issuing a court judgement against him.

“If we released the likes of al-Sadhan, we would be supporting ISIS, and if a court judgement is made against him, we have breached human rights!!” he wrote on Twitter….

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