@narindertweets@SiDavidh6en Welcome to the life of Jews and the interaction with Islamo-Nazis.
They don’t give a fuck about anything. Not Jews. Not Western civilisation. Not even themselves.
@mehdirhasan They’re Iranians, invading Lebanon. Islam and Arabs too invaded Lebanon. Arabised and Islamised it, by force.
You don’t have a mind to lose btw, your mind is Nazi poop.
The Nazi–Islamist–Soviet Axis: Forging the toxic narrative behind “Palestine”
In the photo: Haj Amin al-Husseini (the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem) with Adolf Hitler, taken on November 28, 1941, in Berlin, Germany, at the Reich Chancellery. Just two months later, the Nazis formally adopted the "Final Solution to the Jewish Question" (Die Endlösung der Judenfrage) - their plan to systematically exterminate the Jews of Europe—at the Wannsee Conference on January 20, 1942. We know what followed next.
"The Palestinian Cause" = 2025 Nazism, not a metaphor.
— It’s no surprise the IDF has found Arabic copies of Hitler’s ‘Mein Kampf’ in Gaza homes—including one in a child’s bedroom repurposed as a Hamas base. Similar finds have been made in Judea and Samaria, where raids uncovered Hitler’s manifesto alongside other antisemitic incitement materials.
A few names and facts you should all know:
The modern Palestinian national identity wasn’t born from some organic, grassroots movement rooted in local aspirations. It was deliberately engineered—shaped and weaponised—through a chilling alliance of Nazi Germany, radical Islamic leaders, and Soviet Cold War strategists. Each added their own brand of antisemitic poison, fusing it into a narrative that’s been fuelling conflict for decades.
At the centre of it all in the early 20th century was Haj Amin al-Husseini—the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem in the 1930s and ’40s, the Palestinian movement’s unofficial founder, and an unapologetic ally of Adolf Hitler. In 1941, al-Husseini met with Hitler in Berlin. He went on to broadcast Nazi propaganda in Arabic across the Arab world and helped recruit Muslims into SS divisions like the Handžar Division in the Balkans. His vision? A Jew-free Islamic empire steeped in pan-Islamism and Nazi antisemitism. Nazi-translated copies of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion were spread throughout the Middle East under his influence.
But the poison didn’t end with the fall of the Third Reich.
After WWII, Nazi fugitives fled to Egypt and Syria, embedding themselves into Arab regimes. Figures like Fritz Grobba (former Nazi ambassador to Iraq), Johann von Leers (who converted to Islam as Omar Amin), François Genoud, and Jean Bauverd played key roles in spreading antisemitic and anti-Western propaganda. They financed and armed Islamist groups like the Muslim Brotherhood, founded in 1928, but significantly radicalised through Nazi collaboration in the ’30s and ’40s. Even Rudolf Hess and his brother Alfred Hess were part of this ideological ecosystem, their influence rippling into Arab nationalist and Islamist thought.
This Nazi–Islamist foundation would later be amplified—and masterfully retooled—by the Soviet Union.
The Soviets didn’t invent the Palestinian cause out of thin air. But in the 1960s, they transformed it into a fully-fledged national identity, built to serve their global anti-Western agenda. The KGB identified Yasser Arafat—an Egyptian-born engineer—as the perfect puppet. He was trained at the KGB’s Balashikha special ops school outside Moscow, and groomed to lead the PLO. The KGB even erased his Egyptian origins, replacing them with forged documents claiming he was born in Jerusalem. A Palestinian identity was manufactured by design.
In 1964, the Soviets drafted the PLO charter in Moscow and handpicked 422 Palestinians to ratify it. Their aim wasn’t statehood—it was destabilisation. Arafat, codenamed “Aref,” received $200,000 a month in laundered cash, along with bi-weekly Soviet supply shipments. His modest four-page tract, Falastinuna, was expanded into a 48-page Soviet-style propaganda magazine and distributed across the Arab world.
Mahmoud Abbas, codenamed “Krotov” (Russian for “mole”), was also on the KGB’s books. He worked for them as a liaison in Damascus in the 1980s and studied in Moscow, where he wrote a Holocaust-denying dissertation blaming Jews for their own destruction.
The Soviets took the Nazi-Islamist hate machine and layered it with Marxist-Leninist rhetoric—rebranding Israel as a fascist, imperialist “Zionist oppressor.” Through propaganda fronts like the World Peace Council and the Afro-Asian People’s Solidarity Organisation, they reframed the Palestinian cause as a global anti-imperialist struggle. In this framework, terrorism wasn’t terrorism—it was “liberation.” Operation SIG, led by the KGB, directly funded and trained Palestinian terror groups, including the PLO, to wage what KGB head Yuri Andropov called a “bloodbath” against Israel.
This same campaign reached the global stage in 1975, when the Soviet bloc, backed by Arab regimes, pushed the UN General Assembly to pass Resolution 3379, declaring that “Zionism is a form of racism.” It was a propaganda victory, meant to delegitimise Jewish self-determination while cloaking antisemitism in the language of human rights. The resolution remained in place for 17 years—only revoked in 1991 after the fall of the Soviet Union. But its impact lingers in the mainstreaming of anti-Zionist rhetoric to this day.
Arafat, mentored early on by al-Husseini (though not a blood relative, despite persistent myth), carried this legacy forward. He rejected peace offers like the 1970 Rogers Plan and chose violence, like his attempted coup against King Hussein of Jordan. Abbas continued in his footsteps, publicly playing the “moderate” while quietly sponsoring terror—another Soviet tactic. Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceaușescu personally coached Arafat to project moderation to win sympathy from the West.
This unholy trinity—Nazis, Islamists, and Soviets—didn’t create a movement for Palestinian statehood. They built a weapon. A modern identity forged not to build, but to destroy; not to liberate, but to demonise and attack Israel and the West.
We’re no longer living in the shadow of that lie—we’re trapped inside it. Today, it’s stronger, louder, and more acceptable than it ever was in 1930s Nazi Germany.
And just like then, the world is watching—choosing silence, complicity, or applause.
What will become of humanity? What price will we pay? Time will tell.
The warning signs aren’t on the horizon—they’re already here. And far too many have chosen to look away.