The Persecution Gospel Imprisoned in Sudan and tortured by ISIS, Petr Jasek knows the cost—and hope—of persecution Sudanese death row inmates returning to their cells.


Who could have thought up this plan of God’s?

“After two months, I was transferred to a second prison where the conditions were much worse than the first. I realized that my first prison, the prison of the secret police, was actually considered the best prison in Sudan. Now I was squeezed into a crowded cell with 40 or 50 other men. Sometimes there was not even enough room for everybody to sleep at the same time. We were released only twice a day to go to the toilet. I doubted that I would survive.

One evening they brought 12 Eritrean refugees to our cell, and I sensed the Holy Spirit telling me to go sit beside them and share the gospel. They were so touched by the message of the gospel and I asked them, ‘Do you also want to commit your lives to Jesus?’ And all 12 of them said yes. They prayed with me, and we spent the rest of the night in joyful conversation. In the morning they were transferred to a different prison and I never saw them again, but my spiritual eyes were opened in that moment. I said, “Lord, now I know why I had to be in prison for these past four months, because these people needed to hear the gospel!” 

Immediately, I started to share the gospel even with the Muslim prisoners. Sharing the gospel with Muslims is illegal outside of prison, so of course it is also illegal inside the prison. About a week later, I was put in solitary confinement. This was meant as a punishment, but for me it was a liberation.

A week later, a consular officer from the Czech Embassy brought me the most precious gift I could ever receive in prison—a Bible. I was so thirsty for the Word of God that I started reading immediately. In the darkness of solitary confinement, I could only read while standing at the window, and in this standing position I read the Bible from Genesis to Revelation in three weeks. I continued to read it again and again for the next three months, and the Holy Spirit started to give me new insights.

://nationsmedia.org/sudan-petr-jasek/

After eight months in prison my court case finally started. I was transferred again to a different prison, this time in the middle of nowhere in the desert. It’s a huge prison, with capacity for up to 10,000 prisoners. We had 100 people all in the same cell—real criminals this time, fighting each night. Sometimes people were seriously injured or even killed.

But this prison was unique in that they allowed the Muslims to go to mosque outside of the prison. And for the non-Muslim prisoners, the prison authorities turned one of the cells into a small chapel. On my first day there, elders from this prison chapel heard there was one European and two Sudanese pastors that had arrived at the prison so they came and asked us, ‘Brothers, if you have any word of encouragement, please tell us.’ The two Sudanese pastors pointed at me. They knew that I had had the Bible for three months, just my own private Bible study with the Holy Spirit in solitary confinement. So I started to preach. 

Soon, the elders increased the number of chapel meetings from twice a week to five times per week, and I was able to preach once or sometimes twice a week. I realized that the Lord had prepared me for this by allowing me to study the Scriptures so closely. Now, together with the other pastors, I could preach prison sermons to absolutely hopeless, desperate, and forgotten people who were so thirsty for the Word of God. Every week we witnessed people giving their lives to Christ, so that in six months the number of chapel attendees grew up from 20 to more than 200. This was the best time of my prison life. I stopped being worried and instead became joyful. Every day, after the guards would count us at morning attendance, I rushed to the chapel and spent the whole day talking to people who had decided to follow Christ.

One afternoon I was sitting with the two Sudanese pastors and we all agreed that we had stopped worrying about how much more time we would spend in prison, because every day was filled with joy of sharing the gospel and seeing that the Word of God will never come back empty. 

Isaiah 55:9 says, ‘As the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts.’ And tell me, who on earth could have thought up this plan of God’s? He strengthened my faith through persecution from ISIS. He strengthened my prayer life—I remember whole days that I prayed while walking from dawn to dusk. Then He gave me three months of private Bible study with the Holy Spirit. And all this was preparation for six months of wonderful, fruitful prison ministry. That was a confirmation to me of the sovereignty of the Lord, that he’s in control.” 

“I often tell young people that you can easily measure how much you seek the face of the Lord versus the face of this world—just measure it by time. Of course we have our jobs, studies, families, we have to do certain activities, but we still have a lot of free time. How much of our free time do we spend with the Word of God, with prayers, with seeking his face?”

Refined by affliction and purified like silver 

“Isaiah 48:10 says, ‘Behold I have refined and tested you in the furnace of affliction.’ When we Christians go through persecution it refines us like metal through fire. The main point of putting precious metals like silver and gold through the refining process is obvious—it is to get rid of everything that is not genuine. That’s how I describe how my life was changed by my prison experience.

When you want to purify silver, you need to do it really carefully. You can’t leave silver in the fire for too long, otherwise everything will get burned or oxidized. Someone once asked the silversmith, ‘How do you know when the silver is ready to be taken out of the flame?’ And the silversmith smiled and said, ‘That’s the easiest part. When I start to see my face being reflected in the surface of the silver, that’s the moment when I know I should take it out.’ 

I think that’s a wonderful picture. When you think about our lives being purified by the Lord, he wants his image to be reflected in us. One of the things that I can clearly say is different for me is how my prayer life has changed, how much time I spend in the Word of God. Maybe I don’t spend as much time as I did in prison when I didn’t have to do anything else, but when I’m traveling, when I’m standing in a line, I can read my Bible on my iPhone or listen to it on audio. I can use any opportunity to seek the Lord’s face.

I often tell young people that you can easily measure how much you seek the face of the Lord versus the face of this world—just measure it by time. Of course we have our jobs, studies, families, we have to do certain activities, but we still have a lot of free time. How much of our free time do we spend with the Word of God, with prayers, with seeking his face?”

A gospel of persecution, not prosperity

“I think there’s a danger with ‘instant Christianity.’ We sometimes hear that when you become a believer in Jesus you should become healthy, happy, you should receive everything that you ask for right now. But that’s not the gospel. The gospel that I find in the New Testament, I would call a ‘persecution gospel.’

Persecution is an essential part of the Christian life. The Lord Jesus said to his followers, ‘They have persecuted me, so they will persecute you also.’ Paul goes even further. He says in 2 Timothy 3:12 that anyone who wants to live life according to the teachings of Jesus, anyone who wants to take the gospel seriously and apply it to his or her life, will experience some form of persecution. 

Of course, I’m not saying that everyone will be persecuted the same way. I’ve met heroes of the faith who have lost not only their material things—houses looted and burned, cars destroyed—but who have lost also their loved ones or even parts of their own bodies because they would not deny Christ. But we are the body of Christ, and every part of the body has a different role to play. As long as we Christians in Europe or the United States live in freedom, we can be the voice of the voiceless. We can cry out in our prayers for those who are going through persecution.”

Growing up in the underground church in communist Czechoslovakia, Petr Jasek became intimately familiar with persecution for his faith at an early age. His father was a pastor, and his parents organized secret discipleship meetings in their house and helped distribute Bibles and funds smuggled in from the outside world. 

One day in high school, Jasek came home to discover that both his parents were missing—arrested by the secret police and hauled in for interrogation. When they eventually returned home, Petr’s father went into his library and brought out a book. 

“Read this,” he told Jasek. “It will encourage your faith.”

That book, In God’s Underground, chronicled the imprisonment and torture of Voice of the Martyr’s (VOM) founder Richard Wurmbrand by Romanian communists. It became one of the most important books in Jasek’s life, second only to the Bible.

“When I read about how the Lord supported Richard Wurmbrand in prison, even as he was brutally beaten and brainwashed, I stopped being afraid of any persecution that could come for our family,” Jasek told me. 

When the communist regime fell in 1989, Jasek and a fellow believer wrote a letter to the VOM office in Germany—using an address they had found on the book’s cover—and invited them to come to their country. By 1992, VOM had officially established an office in Czechoslovakia and Jasek had found his calling.

For ten years, Jasek built a career as a hospital director while simultaneously volunteering with Voice of the Martyrs. By 2002, he had been appointed the full-time regional director for VOM, visiting churches to share stories of persecuted Christians and encourage them to pray, and overseeing the ministry’s work in Africa, the Middle East, and Central Asia.

In the years to come, Jasek traveled the globe to countries where Christians were persecuted for their faith. Harnessing the skills he learned as part of the Czech underground church, he smuggled Bibles to Iran and Algeria, delivered aid to war-torn villages in South Sudan, and documented atrocities against Christians all across Africa—photographing bulldozed churches and the maimed bodies of believers and recording testimonies of persecution.

Over the years, his tradecraft developed. He would sneak into countries on a tourist visa so as not to attract attention, always spending his first day site-seeing to fill his camera up with tourist photos that supported his cover story. He learned to stay in hotels for only one night at a time, constantly staying on the move to make it more difficult for secret police or hostile religious extremists to monitor his activities. He learned how to communicate with encrypted email addresses and overwrite the never-quite-empty space on hard drives and camera cards. “Any deleted file can be restored,” he explained.
Clandestine meetings with local Christians were often held in crowded, public places—too loud for the secret police to easily eavesdrop. Other times, he met with contacts in the dead of night, confirming identities with coded phrases before handing off funds for the families of imprisoned Christians. Whenever he met these persecuted Christians, he could encourage them as one who truly understood how they felt. Back in Czechoslovakia, he himself had been one of them.
In 2015, Jasek traveled to Sudan to secretly verify and document reports of persecution. It was supposed to be a quick trip to gather photo evidence and interviews—in and out in four days. Instead, on his way out of the country, Jasek was arrested by the Sudanese secret police, falsely accused of espionage, and thrown into prison for 445 days.
It was a harrowing, life-changing experience for Jasek. For the first two months, he shared a cell with six members of ISIS, who beat and tortured him. He endured months of solitary confinement, sickness, malnourishment, and horrific living conditions in overcrowded prisons. And yet, through it all, Jasek remained faithful—praying for his ISIS tormentors, leading dozens of fellow prisoners to faith, and preaching prison sermons that helped spearhead a small-scale revival behind bars. What man meant for evil, God used for good. 
In February 2017, diplomatic intervention finally secured Jasek’s release. Today, he continues to work with Voice of the Martyrs, sharing his story with churches and inviting them to advocate for persecuted Christians around the world. This March, Nations had the opportunity to speak to Jasek about the lessons he learned in prison about faith, suffering, the power of prayer, and the sovereignty of God.

Though I was weak, the Lord gave me strength

“I reached the bottom of my physical and emotional strength in prison. In the first three months I lost 55 pounds of my bodyweight. At the same time I suffered some internal bleeding which resulted in me losing almost half of my blood. I was extremely weak, both physically and emotionally.

At the same time my faith was tested by my ISIS cellmates. In the past, there had been some cases where ISIS members that were released from prison got their revenge—killing guards who had treated them badly. There were so many ISIS members in this prison that the guards were afraid of them and let them do whatever they wanted.

The first morning when I didn’t join my ISIS cellmates for prayers they asked me, ‘Are you a Christian or are you a Muslim?’ When I told them that I was a Christian, they started to treat me badly, limiting my freedom of movement, slandering me with bad words, and limiting my food and drink. They beat me and tortured me. I never knew from what direction they would come: slapping my face or hitting me with their fists, beating me with a wooden stick or kicking me with their legs.

I was not worried that I would die in prison. I worried that I would lose my mind. I was literally asking the Lord to keep my mind sound.

The ISIS members did not allow me to speak unless they spoke to me first, so my only chance to share the gospel was when they asked me a question. I prayed that the Lord would give me the right words to say. They often asked me about my faith, and though I was very weak the Lord gave me strength.

Christianity is the only religion that teaches its followers to love their enemies. When we go through persecution we should pray that Jesus would reveal himself to our persecutors as their Lord, Savior, and God. That can be difficult. Sometimes I challenge people to join me in prayer for the six ISIS members that were imprisoned with me, that the Lord would let the seeds of the gospel that I was able to sow into their hearts grow that they could also find Jesus.”

“In 2015, Jasek traveled to Sudan to secretly verify and document reports of persecution. It was supposed to be a quick trip to gather photo evidence and interviews—in and out in four days. Instead, on his way out of the country, Jasek was arrested by the Sudanese secret police, falsely accused of espionage, and thrown into prison for 445 days.”

Our omnipotent God wants to hear from us 

“As much as [the ISIS members] beat and tortured me, they were never satisfied. Eventually they came up with the idea to waterboard me. I knew that if they did, it could [kill me] because I was so weak.

The night before the waterboarding, they decided to ask me questions. And if they didn’t like my answer, which was in most cases, they beat me with a wooden stick. Most times when they beat me, I was only aware of the pain. But on that particular night I was on my knees and I experienced a deep peace. I was able to pray for them as they beat me. And I wondered, ‘Where is peace coming from?’

It was only much later, after I had been released, that I was sitting with my wife in our living room and we were telling each other what we each experienced on each day of my imprisonment. We realized that the night [of my beating] my wife had been with a Bible study group. And at one moment, the elder who was leading the study closed his Bible and said, ‘I believe that the Holy Spirit is leading us to pray for Petr and for the situation that he now finds himself in right now in his cell.’ It was exactly the same night. Seven or eight people in that Bible study went to their knees and started to exalt the Lord’s victory in the cell where I was. It was just like in Romans 8:27 where we read that the Holy Spirit intercedes for us according to the will of God. To me, that was a confirmation of the power of prayer.

The next morning, as they were almost ready to start the waterboarding, they showed me the piece of cloth that they would use to cover my mouth. They had plenty of water ready.

Inside the prison, there was one Sudanese guard who was especially hated because he was known for secretly listening to prisoners’ conversations and reporting back to the interrogators. He was on duty that morning and heard that something was going to happen, so he opened the cell door and commanded me to take all my stuff and go. As I was walking out in the midst of them, I felt like Daniel when he was taken out of the lion’s den. The only difference was that the Lord kept the mouths of Daniel’s lions shut, but mine had their mouths hanging wide open.

After I was released, I became convicted about how often someone asked me for prayers and I just said that very simple Christian social phrase, ‘Yes, I will keep you in my prayers.’ But I never really consistently would pray for them. I made a commitment that I would take prayer seriously and really encourage other people to pray as well.

We serve the omnipotent, omnipresent, omniscient God who could save persecuted Christians on his own. He doesn’t need us, but he wants us. He wants to hear from us and he wants to answer our prayers.”

Terrorism and Counterterrorism in South Asia / Pakistan’s Non-State Actor Policy?



for which they can fight for change. So in some sense, it’s not clear whether or not there is, in fact, this silent majority of Pakistanis who are just too cowed and too afraid to fight for change, or in fact, whether a majority of Pakistanis want the Pakistan that is emerging, one which continues to rely upon Islamist militancy as tools of foreign power. So the question confronting Pakistan of today– is there going to be some major event that happens, perhaps in Pakistan’s external environment, relations with India, with the United States, or some domestic cataclysmic event that jolts Pakistan in pursuing a different future, a future with greater separation of mosque and state, a future that is more inclusive for all of Pakistan’s diverse citizenship? Or will Pakistan continue along the most likely trajectory– one of which where Pakistan ever more embraces its jihadi assets, one which pursues ever more violent strategies to resolve its different conflicts with India, as well as Afghanistan? And if that’s the case, that future Pakistan is going to find itself on an increasing collision course with the international community.

Describe the debate between nuclear optimists and nuclear pessimists about the impact of nuclear weapons on South Asian security?


La evidencia sugiere que las armas nucleares ha permitido a Pakistán no solo utilizar actores no estatales, pero a medida que el programa de armas nucleares de Pakistán se hizo cada vez más sólido, Pasar de un programa encubierto a ser un estado de armas nucleares abierto: Pakistán posteriormente se ha envalentonado para ser cada vez más agresivo en su uso de actores no estatales. Sin embargo, una vez que comienza este conflicto, las armas nucleares operar para restringir a los dos países de entrando en una guerra a gran escala. La restricción ocurre realmente a través de dos mecanismos. Uno, aumenta el costo de cualquier acción punitiva india. para castigar a Pakistán por sus diversas estrategias no estatales. Pero también, estas armas nucleares atraen a Estados Unidos y la comunidad internacional para que también trabajar muy enérgicamente con India y Pakistán para encontrar una manera de salvar la cara para que ambas partes puedan retroceder en el conflicto espectro. Entonces, la evidencia de esto es bastante convincente. Lo que podemos ver en la defensa de Pakistán La literatura es tan temprana como la década de 1970, los paquistaníes comenzó a imaginar que no es que necesitaran tener un arma nuclear, sino que era lo que pensaba la India que puedan tener eso que realmente le dio a Pakistán la posición de poder. Así que vemos ya en la década de 1970 y continuando con la de 1980: es decir, mucho antes de que Pakistán se convirtiera en un estado de armas nucleares manifiesto … que los paquistaníes sintieron que había este voladizo nuclear. Entonces, si puedes imaginar cómo planear la nuclearización de Pakistán línea de tiempo, y vale la pena señalar que los estadounidenses estaban tan preocupados sobre los avances de Pakistán en su programa de armas nucleares, que los estadounidenses sancionaron por primera vez a Pakistán en abril de 1979. Así que mientras traza el progreso de Pakistán desde abril ’79 hasta la prueba nuclear de 1998, lo que ves es que el paraguas nuclear de Pakistán comenzó a expandirse. También lo hizo la valentía de Pakistán, por así decirlo, al utilizar actores no estatales. Así que desde 1979 hasta alrededor de 1984, 1989, Pakistán comenzar a apoyar a los insurgentes sij en Punjab de la India. En el mismo período, alrededor del 89 en adelante, es también apoyando a los insurgentes en la Cachemira de la India. Para cuando llegamos a 1998, cuando tanto India como Pakistán han detonado su prueba recíproca, Pakistán está tan envalentonado por la presencia de sus armas nucleares que en realidad envía tropas paramilitares disfrazadas de muyahidines para apoderarse de Territorio indio en los sectores Kargil-Drass de Cachemira. Esto se convierte en la Guerra de Kargil. Y es la primera guerra entre adversarios con armas nucleares desde la frontera de 1969 choque entre los rusos y los chinos.

Describe the debate between nuclear optimists and nuclear pessimists about the impact of nuclear weapons on South Asian security?



  1. The evidence suggests that nuclear weapons
  2. has enabled Pakistan to not only use non-state actors,
  3. but as Pakistan’s nuclear weapons program became increasingly robust–
  4. moving from a covert program to being an overt nuclear weapons state– Pakistan
  5. has been subsequently emboldened to be ever more
  6. aggressive in its use of non-state actors.
  7. However, once this conflict begins, nuclear weapons
  8. operate to constrain the two countries from actually
  9. going into full scale war.
  10. The constraint happens really through two mechanisms.
  11. One, it raises the cost of any Indian punitive action
  12. to punish Pakistan for its various non-state strategies.
  13. But also, these nuclear weapons pull in the United States
  14. and the international community so that we will also
  15. work very vigorously with India and Pakistan
  16. to find some face-saving way so that both sides can back down the conflict
  17. spectrum.
  18. So the evidence for this is actually fairly compelling.
  19. What we can see looking at Pakistani defense
  20. literature is as early as the 1970s, Pakistanis
  21. began imagining that it’s not that they needed to have a nuclear weapon,
  22. but rather that it was what India thought
  23. that they may have that actually gave Pakistan the position of power.
  24. So we see as early as the 1970s and continuing with the 1980s–
  25. that is to say, long before Pakistan became an overt nuclear weapons state–
  26. that Pakistanis felt that there was this nuclear overhang.
  27. And so if you can imagine plotting out Pakistan’s nuclearization
  28. timeline, and it’s worth noting that the Americans were so concerned
  29. about Pakistani advances in their nuclear weapons program,
  30. that the Americans first sanctioned Pakistan in April of 1979.
  31. So as you plot out Pakistan’s progress from April
  32. ’79 all the way to the nuclear test of 1998,
  33. what you see is Pakistan’s nuclear umbrella began to expand.
  34. So did Pakistan’s bravery, if you will, in using non-state actors.
  35. So from 1979 to circa 1984, ’89, Pakistan
  36. begin supporting Sikh insurgents in India’s Punjab.
  37. In the same period, circa ’89 onward, it’s
  38. also supporting insurgents in India’s Kashmir.
  39. By the time we get to 1998, when both India and Pakistan have detonated
  40. their reciprocal test, Pakistan is so emboldened
  41. by the presence of its nuclear weapons that it actually
  42. sends in paramilitary troops disguised as mujahideen to seize
  43. Indian territory in the Kargil-Drass sectors of Kashmir.
  44. This becomes the Kargil War.
  45. And it’s the first war between nuclear armed adversaries since the 1969 border
  46. clash between the Russians and the Chinese.

PAKISTAN Y INDIA


PERSONAS SEPARADAS NACIÓN SEPARADA REQUIEREN ESTADO INDEPENDIENTE ESTABA CLARO PARA LA SOLUCIÓN SER INDIA Y PAKISTÁN INDEPENDIENTES 11 MILLONES DE PERSONAS DEJARON SUS CASAS PARA IR AL NUEVO ESTADO QUE SERIA INDIA O PAKISTÁN AL IGUAL GRUPOS RELIGIOSOS. HUBO VIOLENCIA LAMENTABLEMENTE FUERON MARCAS HORRIBLES QUE SE QUEDARON PARA RESOLVER PAKISTAN E INDIA. ESTO FUE EL LO MALO DE CONSEGUIR UN NUEVO ESTADO.

INDIA AND PAKISTAN


SEPARATED PEOPLE SEPARATE NATION REQUIRE INDEPENDENT STATE IT WAS CLEAR FOR THE SOLUTION TO BE INDIA AND PAKISTAN INDEPENDENT 11 MILLION PEOPLE LEFT THEIR HOUSES TO GO TO THE NEW STATE THAT WOULD BE INDIA OR PAKISTAN AS WELL AS RELIGIOUS GROUPS. THERE WAS VIOLENCE UNLIKELY IT WERE HORRIBLE BRANDS THAT REMAINED TO RESOLVE PAKISTAN AND INDIA. THIS WAS THE BAD THING ABOUT GETTING A NEW STATE.

¿La amenaza terrorista a Israel y la respuesta israelí / el enfoque de la CT de Israel?


I LOVE THE DEFENSE OF SHIEL OPERATION IN A GREAT INTELLIGENCE TRULY IMPORTANT TO THE CITIES EVERYTHING ISRAEL DOES AT THIS POINT IN REALITY IS THE BEST WAY TO KNOW THAT THERE WILL BE NO BOMB ATTACK ON THE CITIES FOR THE INHABITANTS. ALL COUNTRIES MUST CARRY OUT THIS FOLLOW-UP OF WHO WANTS TO ADCESS A UNIVERSITY PUBLIC PLACES SO THAT FOR WHAT REASON AND IDENTIFICATION WE CANNOT LOWER THE GUARD WITH COVID-19 IS THAT WE MUST MORE MAKE SURE THAT THERE IS A PERIOD OF FOLLOW-UP. WHAT REASON LIBRARIES GOVERNMENT BUILDINGS ALL THIS IS VERY IMPORTANT NOT TO LOWER THE GUARD BOTH THE EUROPEAN COUNTRIES AND THE UNITED STATES HAVE TO FOLLOW STRONGLY THIS TYPE OF FOLLOW-UP OF PEOPLE WHO FREED FROM ENTERING THE PLACE WITH A PREPARED LIVING IN CASE OF A LIVING IN CASE AND NOT LOWERING THE GUARD AS ISRAEL DOES WE MUST BE ATTENTIVE AT ALL TIMES FOR THE WELL-BEING OF THE CHILDREN AND THE FAMILIES. GOD BLESS US ALL FROM ALL EVIL AMEN.

¿La amenaza terrorista a Israel y la respuesta israelí / el enfoque de la CT de Israel?


ME ENCANTA LA DEFENSA DE SHIEL OPERATION EN UNA GRAN INTELIGENCIA VERDADERAMENTE INPORTANTE PARA LAS CIUDADES TODO LO QUE HACE ISRAEL EN ESTE PUNTO EN REALIDAD ES LA MEJOR MANERA DE SABER QUE NO VA HABER UN ATAQUE DE BOMBA EN LAS CIDADES PARA LOS HABITANTES. TODOS LOS PAISES DEBEN LLEVAR ACABO ESTE SEGUIMIENTO DE QUIEN QUIERE ADCEDER A UNA UNIVERSIDAD LUGARES PUBLICOS PARA QUE POR QUE MOTIVO Y IDENTIFICACION NO PODEMOS BAJAR LA GUARDIA CON COVID 19 ES QUE DEBEMOS MAS ASEGURARNOS DE QUE HAYA UN SEGUIMIENTO DE IDENTIFICACION Y DE SABER QUIEN ENTRO A QUE HORA Y POR QUE RAZON LIBRERIAS EDIFICIOS GUBERNAMENTALES TODO ESTO ES MUY IMPORTANTE DE NO BAJAR LA GUARDIA TANTO LOS PAISES EUROPEOS COMO ESTADOS UNIDOS TIENEN QUE SEGUIR FUERTEMENTE ESTE TIPO DE SEGUIMIENTOS DE PERSONAS QUE QUIERAN ENTRAR A LUGARES GUBERNAMENTALES UNIVERSIDADES ESCUELAS LIBRERIAS HOSPITALES PARA PROTEJER LAS VIDAS EN CASO SE UN ATENTADO DEBEMOS ESTAR PREPARADOS CON DILIGENCIA Y NO BAJAR LA GUARDA COMO LO HACE ISRAEL DEBEMOS ESTAR ATENTO EN TODO MOMENTO POR EL BIEN ESTAR DE LOS NINOS Y LAS FAMILIAS DIOS NOS BENDIGA DE TODO MAL AMEN.

Israel has often tried to deter terrorist groups. Why are terrorist groups hard to deter, based on the Israeli experience?


Detecting terrorist groups is something we must do every second as I mentioned terrorism is Satan that is his name. GOD REBUIDS YOU SATAN. for the same reason we must wake up wake up and seek terrorism every second be implacable before him and win the battle of the Lord we must follow the example of Israel in detecting terrorist groups but waking up in despair every second we could not tolerate failing we could not tolerate not finding them in time. especially for the lives we have to save the lives of the cities the families we would never want them to suffer damage from an explosion JESUS ​​CHRIST HELP US TO BE AJILEZ AND EFFECTIVE IN THE SAME WAY ISRAEL MUST WAKE UP IN INCREASE SECOND BY SECOND SEARCH FOR TERRORISM ARE NOT ACCEPTABLE IN THIS CENTURY IN THIS TIME NO TO THE PUMPS AND NO TO THE EXPLOTIONS. GOD HELP US THESE WHAT I CAN SAY THAT THE LORD TOUCHES THE HEART OF HAMAS SO THAT PEACE REIGN AND WE WILL NO LONGER SUFFER ALL. IF NOT THAT TOGETHER AS BROTHERS WE CAN GROW ON THIS EARTH TO BE BETTER FOR THE NEXT GENERATIONS TO COME AND LIVE IN A BETTER WORLD AMEN AMEN. ALSO BASED ON ISRAEL’S EXPERIENCE TO DEFEND AND OVERCOME TERRORISM WE LOSE INNOCENT LIVES IN PALESTINE PRECIOUS LIVES WE MUST BE BETTER WE MUST REACH A PEACE TREATY WITH HAMAS URGENTLY SHALOM AMEN. HAMAS MUST RESPECT THE PROTECTED NATION OF ISRAEL BY GOD IN THE NAME OF JESUS ​​CHRIST AMEN AMEN

Israel ha tratado a menudo de disuadir a los grupos terroristas. ¿Por qué es difícil disuadir a los grupos terroristas, basándose en la experiencia israelí?


detectar grupos terroristo es algo que debemos hacer cada segundo como yo e mencionado el terrorismo es Satanas ese es su nombre por lo mismo es que debemos despertar despertar y buscar el terrorismo cada segundo ser implacables ante el y ganar la batalla del Senor debemos seguir el ejemplo de Israel en detectar grupos terroristas pero despertar con desesperacion a cada segundo no podriamos tolerar el fallar no podriamos tolerar el no encontrarlos a tiempo . especialmente por las vidas tenemos que guardar las vidas de las ciudades las familias jamas quisieramos que sufran un dano de una explosion JESUSCRISTO NOS AYUDE A SER AJILEZ Y EFICACES DE IGUAL MANERA ISRAEL DEBE DE DESPERTAR EN INCREMENTAR SEGUNDO A SEGUNDO LAS BUSQUEDAS DE TERRORISMO NO SON ACEPTABLES EN ESTE SIGLO EN ESTE TIEMPO NO A LAS BOMBAS Y NO A LAS EXPLOCIONES. DIOS NOS AYUDE ESTODO LO QUE PUEDO DECIR QUE EL SENOR TOQUE EL CORAZON DE HAMAS PARA QUE REINE LA PAZ Y YA NO SUFRAMOS TODOS . SI NO QUE JUNTOS COMO HERMANOS PORDAMOS CRECER EN ESTA TIERRA PARA LAS SER MEJORES PARA LAS SIGUIENTES GENERACIONES POR VENIR Y QUE VIVAN EN UN MUNDO MEJOR AMEN AMEN. DE IGUAL MANERA BASADO EN LA ESPERIENCIA DE ISRAEL A DEFENDER Y DEROCAR EL TERRORISMO PERDEMOS VIDAS INOCENTES EN PALESTINA VIDAS PRECIOSAS DEBEMOS SER MEJORES DEBEMOS LLEGAR A UN TRATADO DE PAZ CON HAMAS URGENTEMENTE SHALOM AMEN. HAMAS DEBE RESPETAR LA NACION PROTEJIDA DE ISRAEL EN EL NOMBRE DE JESUSCRISTO AMEN AMEN.