Maybe it isn't that there is a single "unified" radical Islam, just that Islam by and tends to be radical, just as it tends to be repressive and intolerant.
Case examples are not merely limited British teachers in Sudan, but how about Darfur, countries like Iran, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, Afghanistan, Tribal Pakistan, Iraq without secular rule take your pick between Al Qaeda or the Sunni/Shiite's going at it, even countries that were more moderate like Indonesia have been put on watch lists for new found repressive of other religions and upticks in radicalization.
So I guess I can point to all this evidence of problems, which by and large came at the behest of Muslims (radical ones), in Muslim countries. But according to RB this isn't real, there is no connection, its incoherent, and a construct. Islamic jihadism existed before Shrub, and it will be there after him too.
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To win a war you must serve no master but your ambition.
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