/mena/

Niggas who don't live inside the red area

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Loool.

>try to make a /magh/ general
>it immediately fails because maghreboids are incapable coons
>seethe at mashreqis because theirs is successful
Why are Maghrecoons like that?

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بعيدا عن السياسة مقتدى الصدر ابشع شخص فالعالم
كس حفيدتو ابن القابة عهالمنظر ما ابشعو، قديش الله مبعوص من هالكائن لحتى خلقو بهالبشاعة

based and redpilled

مقتدى الصدر لبناني مو عراقي

huh
add tunisia and remove algeria
you are irrelevant to what maghreb is

>It remains to be seen who benefited from the crime. When al-Sadr disappeared, many witnesses said there had been tensions between Gaddafi and the imam over Lebanese politics, the actions of Palestinian organizations financed by Libya in south Lebanon, or even financial or theological conflicts with Gaddafi.

>But a book about the fall of the Shah of Iran in 1979, “The Fall of Heaven: The Pahlavis and the Final Days of Imperial Iran”, offers a fresh perspective, suggesting that the Iranian revolutionary mullahs, led by Ayatollah Khomeini, who was in exile at the time, believed that al-Sadr was a threat. The book’s author, Andrew S. Cooper, a Middle East specialist and professor at Columbia University who met many of the Shah’s relatives, said that the Shah and al-Sadr were secretly in contact despite appearing to be in conflict in public. The Iranian monarch, according to Cooper, wanted al-Sadr to return to Iran a couple of months before he was overthrown to counteract Khomeini’s revolutionary ambitions.

>"The shah was willing to start a dialogue with Musa al-Sadr," Cooper told the New York Times. “I would say that he was the biggest hope in terms of coexistence between Shiism and modernity. His disappearance put an end to this, and opened the way to a militant Islam in Iran.

انا ما سألت عن جنسيتو

Based بروفة الأنقلا