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Gepubliceerd op 25 aug. 2016
Obviously it is a parody video.
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Viral Comedy Hilarious Parody
Psychotic ISIS off their faces on drugs that make them feel 'fearless and invincible'
WARPED Islamic State (ISIS) is wired-up on pills that turn them into drug crazed killing machines – capable of slaughtering people in cold blood without a second thought.
The amphetamine, known as Captagon, is being increasingly trafficked from Syria to other areas of the Middle East, according to the UN.
Captagon has been available since the 1960s and was used to treat hyper-active kids because it improved their concentration.
But when taken in large doses by adults the speed-like drug masks feelings of pain, fear and hunger – and crucially makes troops feel they have super-human strength.
Rebel fighter Ahmed Thalej told The Times a white powder used by Syrian regime forces turned them "into monsters".
He said: "That helps them fight crazily, attack uncovered against strong positions.
"They don’t even care about their wounded."
Countries bordering Syria have seized millions of Captagon pills, worth hundreds of millions of pounds, in the past year alone.
The Jordanian border police recovered two million Captagon pills on Sunday, after killing 12 gunmen in a deadly gun battle on the Syrian border.
The country's customs also seized a staggering 16,768,684 Captagon tablets coming from Syria last year.
Turkey reported discovering a massive 11million tablets near the Syrian border in November while Lebanon also seized 15 million pills in April and five tonnes in December.
The Paris attackers were thought to have necked loads of Captagon pills before savagely slaughtering 130 people in November – because it could dull their human feelings and turn them into killers.
The World Health Organisation put the drug on a list of controlled substances in 1986.
But the drug is often used throughout the Middle East.
The UN office on drugs and crime (UNDOC) said former fighters have given evidence to suggest Captagon is used by all sides of the Syrian conflict – and is making the already brutal civil war much worse.
UNDOC official Masoof Karimipor said: "Fighters recount Captagon as making them feel powerful, fearless and invincible.
"It’s chemical courage."
Former head of the Revolutionary Council in Manbej Imaduldin Hneithel said drug taking was widespread amongst ISIS fighters.
The barbaric militants take the drug despite the fact it was banned under the savage death cult’s strict rules.
But Mr Karimipour claimed the growth of the illegal wartime drug economy should not come as a surprise as Syria was home to a large pharmaceuticals industry before the war.
He said: "If you’re in organised crime, civil war is good for business.
"The profit margins are enormous.
"Each [Captagon] pill, made for pennies’ worth of chemicals, is sold on the street for dollars five to dollars 20, depending on that what the market will bear."
Drugs in war are not new.
The Nazis dished out an early speed drug called Pervitin to its troops.
Some of Germany's worst atrocities in Eastern Europe and the occupied bits of the Soviet Union were committed by soldiers and SS brigades who were off their chops on speed.
According to medical recrods, Adolf Hitler's doctor also used to supply him with cocaine, which he would then snort while making decisions about fighting the war and the fate of Europe's Jews.
In the Vietnam War US marines were given amphetamines by the US government to combat tiredness in jungle warfare conditions.
But many troops took larger doses than advised – as well as topping it up with other substances bought on the South Vietnamese black market.
Historians say many drugged up marines commited war crimes and that this alienated Vietnamese people, driving them to secretly support America's opponents, the Vietcong who went on to win the war.