Divide & Conquer: Muslims vs Islam
For 1300 years, Muslims had lived under some form of consolidated Muslim rule, first under the Abbasid Empire, from 750 AD to the conquest of Baghdad by the Mongols in 1258, followed by the Ottoman Empire, until its collapse following World War I. The Muslims are entirely to be blame for their own demise, but it was not without some assistance from foreign powers, particularly the expanding British Empire and particularly their devastating strategy of Divide and Conquer. First in Arabia, the British instigated the notorious heretical Wahhabi movement to undermine the Ottoman Empire from within. In India, under the British East India Company, and then the British Raj, Wahhabi influence resulted in a quagmire of internecine strife led by the Deobandis, Barelvis and Ahl-i Hadith. These movements were part of a larger trend cultivated by British agents known as Revivalism, an open attack on the legal foundations of Islam, known as the Madhabs, which had long been protected by the “Closing of the Doors of Ijtihad.” That agenda continues to further distance Muslims from the true basis of Sunni Islam in our time, through the most recent manifestation of the Divide and Conquer strategy, that of Salafis against Sufis, or Traditional Muslims, known as Wasatim, who provide accurate criticism of the other, in order to each recruit dupes to their respective deviations.
Volume two
Pan-Arabism
The Jihad Plan
The Arab Revolt
Mandate for Palestine
Brit Shalom
Ibn Saud
The Khilafat Movement
Woking Muslim Mission
Abolition of the Caliphate
Treaty of Jeddah
The School of Wisdom
The Herrenklub
World Ecumenical Movement
The Synarchist Pact
The Round Table Conferences
Hitler’s Mufti
United Nations
Ikhwan, CIA and Nazis
The European Movement
The Club of Rome
The Golden Chain
Sophia Perennis
Islam and the West
The Iranian Revolution
Petrodollar Islam
The Terror Network
The Iran-Contra Affair
Operation Cyclone
The Age of Aquarius
One-World Religion
September 11
Armageddon
The King’s Torah
The Chaos President
The Amman Message
Progressive Muslims
The Neo-Traditionalists
Post-Wahhabism
Volume one
introduction
Harut and Marut
The Lost Tribes of Israel
The Doors of Ijtihad
Old Man of the Mountain
Knights of the Temple
The Rosy Cross
Mason Kings
The Moravian Church
The Lost Word
The Society of the Dilettanti
Unknown Superiors
The Mixed Multitude
Romantic Satanism
The Palladian Rite
The Forty-Eighters
The Ottoman Empire
The British Raj
The Orphic Circle
The Bahai Faith
The Valleys of the Assassins
The Orientatlists
The Iranian Enlightenment
The Brotherhood of Luxor
Neo-Vedanta
The Mahatma Letters
Parliament of the Word’s Religions
Young Egypt
The Young Ottomans
The Reuter Concession
The Persian Constitutional Revolution
All-India Muslim League
Al Azhar
The Antisemitic League
Protocols of Zion
Der Judenstaat
The Young Turks
Journeys to the West
Pan-Turkism