Jihad Watch : It began when Interior Minister Laurent Nunez warned that there was a
“very high” terrorist threat aimed at Christmas. “Christmas markets are
targets of terrorist organizations,” he revealed and cited the previous
Strasbourg Christmas market attack in which an Algerian Muslim
terrorist with 27 previous convictions had opened fire, killing 5 people
and wounding 11 more, and the Berlin Christmas market attack in which a
Tunisian Muslim refugee drove a truck into the market killing 11 and
wounding 56 people as examples of possible incoming attacks.
Already this year a stolen gun and ammo were found stashed in a
flower pot at the children’s section of the Strasbourg Christmas market.
The weapon may have been cached to avoid the ‘bag checks’ that have
become commonplace there and at European festivals and events.
New Year’s Eve at the Champs-Élysées, which was already utilizing bag
checks and pat-downs to screen for not only weapons but any alcohol,
glass bottles and anything that could be used as a weapon, was canceled
because the authorities and the police could not assure the safety of
the celebrants in the most iconic spot in all of France. The place where
General DeGaulle had once walked down to celebrate France’s liberation
has fallen under Islamic occupation.
France recently marked the 10th anniversary of the 2015 Paris attacks
during which Islamic terrorists tried to blow up a soccer stadium,
massacred people in the Bataclan theater and attacked local cafes in an
orgy of bloodshed killing 130 people and wounding over 400 more.
“Unfortunately, no one can guarantee the end of attacks,” President
Macron warned at the commemoration of one of the deadliest days for
Islamic Jihad in Europe since the original Ottoman invasions, but
claimed that 85 attacks had been prevented including 6 in 2025.
(That count is probably up to 7 since yet another terror plot was broken up in December.)
Muslims marked the anniversary in their own fashion when the
girlfriend of one of the imprisoned Islamic terrorists, a French woman
who had converted to Islam, was arrested for her own terrorist plot
along with her current husband and an unknown teenager.
Another three women had been arrested a few months earlier for
planning their tribute to the Bataclan theater attack by bombing a
concert hall or a bar. One of the women had been preaching Jihad to her
20,000 followers on TikTok. These should not be confused with the
previous plot by three Muslim women to set off a bomb outside the Notre
Dame cathedral.
The Bataclan attacks were not the only 10 year anniversary being marked in France.
In response to the latest Muslim terrorist threat to Christmas,
France is once again calling in the troops and Interior Minister Nunez
urged “the military personnel of Operation Sentinelle, to ensure a
‘visible and deterrent presence.’” Operation Sentinelle was launched in
2015 after the Muslim terrorist attacks on the Charlie Hebdo satirical
magazine and a Kosher supermarket in which 17 people were killed by a
conspiracy of 14 Muslims operating inside and outside France.
The 7,000 soldiers of Operation Sentinelle (which can be increased by
another 3,000 soldiers around Christmas or during other times of
significant Islamic terrorist threats) have been permanently deployed
across France to protect “places of worship and sensitive sites.”
The deployment, originally meant to be short term, has become open
ended. The French Ministry of Defense quotes that “our commitment is
long-term, for as long as this situation requires.” Minister of the
Armed Forces Catherine Vautrin echoed the message, “the terrorist threat
is permanent.” Macron had already admitted this is a war with no end in
sight.
Shortly after the Bataclan anniversary, Macron announced that France
was bringing back voluntary conscription starting with 3,000 in 2026 and
going up to 50,000 by 2035. “We need to mobilise, mobilising the nation
to defend itself,” he argued. Officially this is about countering
Russia, but if so the mobilization would be far more rapid and much more
immediate.
France is preparing for a war at home.
National anti-terror prosecutor Olivier Christen warned that Islamic
terrorism remains “the most significant, both in scale and in the level
of operational readiness”.
Meanwhile the French government is grappling with Islamization.
After announcing 820 Islamization ‘separatist’ offenses against
France’s official ‘secularism’ policy, Interior Minister Nunez warned
that the next step was battling Islamic infiltration.
“We’ve dealt with terrorism, we’ve dealt with separatism, now we’re
tackling infiltration,” Nunez warned, and looking into “the links
between representatives of political movements and organizations and
networks supporting terrorist activity or propagating Islamist
ideology.”
“It is important to provide a clear, concise, and precise response to
those who might suggest that Sharia law could be applied in France.”
These are praiseworthy policies at a time when the politicians of the
United Kingdom and the United States have mostly surrendered to
Islamization and hail it as a wonderful thing, but the soldiers in the
streets, the cancellation of New Year’s Eve at the Champs-Élysées and
the drumbeat of terrorist plots also show that fighting Islam as an
ideology is not enough without dealing with the demographic problems of
mass migration and domestic colonization.
81 years after De Gaulle walked along the Champs-Élysées to Notre
Dame to mark the liberation of Paris, the city, including the
Champs-Élysées, is under enemy occupation again.
It will take another liberation to end the ‘no-go-zones’ and set Paris free or the city will fall.