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Europe
Blackmailing Europe
2007-05-25
It isn't hard to spot the difference in the press's reaction to Israel's carefully targeted response to the hail of missiles raining down on Sderot from Gaza, and the Lebanese government's bombardment of a Palestinian "refugee camp" where terrorists belonging to Fatah al-Islam are holed up.

Lebanon's action is — rightly — seen as a legitimate act of self-defense against a Syrian-backed attempt to destabilize its government. Israel, by contrast, is condemned for its decision to retaliate against the Hamas leaders who are ordering indiscriminate attacks on its civilians.

Right now, far more Palestinians are dying in the civil war between Hamas and Fatah, or between the Lebanese army and Islamist terrorists, than those who are being killed by Israel. There is nothing new about this disproportion. In fact, since 1945, the number of Muslims killed by other Muslims outnumbers those killed by Israelis by a factor that far exceeds 100-1.

The death toll from the civil wars, genocides, and insurgencies that have raged across the Islamic world from Algeria to Indonesia simply dwarfs the numbers killed in the Arab-Israeli wars or the Palestinian intifadas.

Yet, here in Britain, as elsewhere in the West, the demonization of Israel is relentless. Press coverage during the run-up to next month's anniversary of the Six Day War has been uniformly hostile. A vociferous campaign to lift the European Union's boycott of the murderous Hamas regime is gaining ground, and, in any case, the aid is still flowing to the terrorists through all kinds of backwaters.

Nor has Hamas abandoned its genocidal policy towards Israel and America. One of its leading spokesmen, the acting speaker of the Palestinian Legislative Council, Ahmad Bahr, ended his sermon in a Sudan mosque last month with the following prayer: "Oh Allah, vanquish the Jews and their supporters. Oh Allah, count their numbers, and kill them all, down to the very last one. Oh Allah, show them a day of darkness. Oh Allah, who sent down His Book, the mover of the clouds, who defeated the enemies of the Prophet, defeat the Jews and the Americans, and bring us victory over them."

This kind of thinking is driving the violence that is endemic at the interface between Islam and other civilizations. How long will it be before that interface runs through the streets of every major city in the West?

Europe today looks like a continent at peace. And so it is. With the exception of the Balkan nations, Europeans have enjoyed the longest continuous period of peace in modern history. For this, they have America to thank. Despite the hysteria directed at the United States, the pax Americana has been incomparably less oppressive than the pax Romana. In reality, however, Europe is a tinderbox.

In Berlin, former Baader-Meinhof terrorists hold master classes in rioting for protesters planning to disrupt next month's the G-8 Summit in Germany. In France, the election of President Sarkozy has galvanized all the Chanel-scented sans culottes of our day to man the barricades.

The further east you go, the more febrile the situation. Poland has not been so worried about Russia since the martial law period of the 1980s. Estonia is fighting the first cyber-war in history. Russian e-sabotage has almost brought the government of Estonia — less than a third the size of New York State and a tenth of the population of New York State — to its knees. The Putin regime has also cut off transport links and trade. What prompted this malicious campaign? The Estonians moved a Soviet war memorial from the center of their capital to a military cemetery. That's it.

But the biggest threat to civil order in Europe comes not from outside, but from within. At least 20 million Muslims now live in Europe, almost all concentrated in a handful of large cities in the richer, western countries. Hopes that they would gradually integrate into these ultra-tolerant societies, economies, and cultures have not become a reality. Muslims have chosen segregation instead. So the host countries are beginning to abandon multiculturalism in favor of integration.

In Sweden, the government is trying to ban arranged marriages and has proposed to ban the veil for girls who are under 15 years old, and instituting compulsory gynecological exams as a deterrent to prevent female genital mutilation, which occurs in some parts of the Muslim world. The minister behind this policy, Nyamko Sabuni, is herself a former African refugee — and a former Muslim. She rejects accusations of Islamophobia from Muslim organizations: "I will not be scared into silence. I will never accept that women and girls are oppressed in the name of religion."

It is striking that such outspoken voices so often come from those who know the Islamic world from the inside. The Dutch politician forced to go into hiding, Ayaan Hirsi Ali, is the best-known, but there are more emerging all the time.

Ed Husain's book "The Islamist" is a surprise best-seller in Britain. It charts the author's spiritual journey from conversion to radical Islam to the brink of terrorism, followed by disillusionment and a new mission to save other young Muslims from predatory preachers.

As the Islamists take heart from the loss of nerve on Iraq and vilification of Israel, Europe looks ever more vulnerable to blackmail. This week, a terrorist group linked to Al Qaeda warned the French that they would be punished for exercising their democratic rights: "As you have chosen the crusader and Zionist Sarkozy as a leader … we in the Abu Hafs al-Masri Brigades warn you that the coming days will see a bloody jihadist campaign … in the capital of Sarkozy."

Let's hope that the voices of sanity have not come too late.
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Europe
Al-Qaeda group threatens attacks in France
2007-05-15
An Al-Qaeda front group in Europe threatened on Tuesday to launch bloody attacks in France in response to the election of "crusader and Zionist" Nicolas Sarkozy as president.
I'll bet that comes as news to him.
Makes me wonder if they fired their press release writer much like KCNA did a while back ...
"As you have chosen the crusader and Zionist Sarkozy as a leader ... we in the Abu Hafs al-Masri Brigades warn you that the coming days will see a bloody jihadist campaign ... in the capital of Sarkozy," the group's "Europe division" said in an Internet statement addressed to the French people. The campaign will be "against all those who allow themselves to follow the policy" of the US administration, said the statement whose authenticity could not verified.

The Abu Hafs al-Masri Brigades takes its name from an Al-Qaeda commander killed during the US-led invasion of Afghanistan in October 2001. The group previously claimed responsibility for the July 2005 terror attacks in London, as well those in Madrid in March 2004 and in Istanbul in November 2003. Just after the London bombings, the group warned European nations to pull their troops out of Iraq within a month or face more attacks like them.
The Abu Hafs al-Masri Brigades don't seem to have had anything to do with London -- those were home-grown, Lashkar-e-Taiba-trained dipsy doodles, working under a Qaeda controller; the Madrid booms were courtesy of the infant Moroccan Islamic Combat Group, not Abu Hafs; and the Istanbooms were courtesy of al-Qaeda working through the Great Eastern Islamic Heroes Front, or whatever they hell grandiose name they call themselves. Abu Hafs al-Masri brigades appear to exist only on the internet, claiming the credit for other people's atrocities.
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Terror Networks
Online jihadis plotting against Denmark
2006-02-07
The recently declassified document called “Information Operations Roadmap,” which highlights how the U.S. military is learning to “fight the net,” has drawn much interest from Western commentators. There is concern over the ambitions to exercise control over the internet expressed in the document. The October 2003 document, signed by Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, also highlights the vulnerability of U.S. networks to infiltration and destruction. The document called for a radical re-evaluation of how the military should conduct electronic warfare, including psychological operations (PsyOps) and aggressive hacking techniques.

From evidence found in jihadi forums, the U.S. military has its work cut out. Since the explosive growth of the virtual jihad community after the loss of Afghanistan, which has seen the number of radical websites mushroom from less than 100 to several thousand today, the mujahideen have demonstrated their sophistication in the medium. Much discussion space is given not only to protecting themselves from penetration, but for taking the hacker warfare to their enemies. Most radical jihadi forums devote an entire section to the technique. For example, in the “jihadi hacker forum” of the radical jihadist al-Ghorabaa site (http://www.alghorabaa.net/forums), the most popular comment strings are: “penetrating computer devices” and “easy methods to penetrate servers in an intranet.” Further postings feature:

- "How to steal passwords (deliverable via email)" and "how to reveal the passwords under the asterisks"
- "How to protect yourself from attack"
- "Can you be arrested due to your emails?"
- "Encyclopedia of hacking sites"
- "Concealment on the web: a lesson in intermediaries" (anonymous browsing techniques)
- "A book in Arabic for instruction in hacking techniques." This last posting provides a 344-page, profusely illustrated, step-by-step guide intended by the anonymous author for "terminating pornographic sites and those intended for the Jews and their supporters."

Other sites such as the Egyptian Hackers Intelligence Agency (http://eljehad.netfirms.com) specialize in the techniques, while sites such as Jihadak Matlub (“your jihad is wanted”) aim to channel the efforts of armchair mujahideen in the campaign.

The most recent demonstration of the efficiency, coordination and ingenuity of the internet mujahideen is the uproar over the cartoons published by the Danish paper Jyllands-Posten depicting the Prophet Muhammad. This theme is currently conspicuous among all the electronic warfare sections of the jihadi forums, which have taken this as a cause célèbre. The al-Ghorabaa site coordinated a 24-hour attack on this and other newspaper sites and paraded its success on February 2 with the result (see illustration).

Following this, the forum participants initiated discussion on how to broaden the campaign. This was aided by the death sentences on the cartoonist pronounced by radical sheikhs such as Nazim al-Misbah in Kuwait, reported on al-Arabiya television, and the report by the Lebanese daily al-Nahar that Usbat al-Ansar in the Ein Helweh refugee camp had called for “reviving the ‘tradition of slaughter,’” and demanded that Osama bin Laden take vengeance (http://www.annahar.com). The threat, according to the pan-Arab daily al-Quds al-Arabi, has since been answered by the Abu Hafs al-Masri Brigades, who sent a declaration to the paper detailing how they have threatened Denmark with a “lasting war and a series of blessed raids” (http://www.alquds.co.uk).

Amid the controversy over the burning of the Danish and Norwegian embassies in Damascus and the burning of the Danish embassy in Beirut, al-Ghorabaa participants also called for a global “embassy-burning day” with Islamic youth called on to set fire to Danish embassies all over the world. As a demonstration of the value of the web to the jihad, the day is to be coordinated by the following mobile phone message: “Urgent! Spread this; Resistance from the entire Islamic world before all Danish embassies in Muslim states, to protest against the publication of the pictures and to demand an apology; [demonstration to take place] on February 13, 2006. Participate and defend your Prophet!”

Confident that the scheme will receive wide acceptance, the posting then urged participants to distribute the message demand to all forums irrespective of their ideological line. “Let those who wish for a practical victory,” it details, “take a glass bottle filled with petrol and some cloth wadding…remember to incite the crowds to storm the embassy, as happened in Indonesia” (http://www.alghorabaa.net/forums/showthread.php?t=3091).
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Europe
Italy Downplays Al-Qaeda Christmas Threat
2005-11-07
Rome, 7 Nov. (AKI) - A new message threatening Italy with attacks involving surface-to-air missiles or poisonous substances has appeared on Islamic internet forums linked to the al-Qaeda terror network. The threat is made under the name of Sayf al-Adel, one of al-Qaeda's main leaders, who disappeared after the US invasion of Afghanistan and who, experts believe, is currently in hiding or in prison in Iran. However, Italian interior minister Giuseppe Pisanu played down the threat, saying there was no cause for excessive alarm.

Both the title and the content of the message make reference to a news story reported a couple of weeks ago, about rumours that Osama bin Laden had been killed in the earthquake which struck Pakistani Kashmir last month. The title of the message talks of "good news which, God willing, will arrive soon from the land of the Romans". This comes "from your brother Sayf al-Adel to all those who have said that Sheikh Osama bin Laden died in the Pakistan earthquake, was arrested or fell ill," the statement says.

The militant then states that "these reports are only the fruit of a media war. Sheikh Osama bin Laden is well and in a safe place, and we will soon see him during the Christmas holidays in the land of the Romans, after the next attack in Europe, which will primarily regard Italy."

The message suggests that Italy or another European country is due to be attacked around Christmas and that such an attack will be immediately followed by a message from Osama bin Laden. It has been almost a year since the last audio message attributed to the al-Qaeda leader appeared, and more than a year since he made his last video message.

The message on the forum goes on to provide details of what form the attack on Italy might take. In particular it talks of the Abu Hafs al-Masri Brigade as the operative cell due to 'take care of' Italy.
"You will see the attacks of the Abu Hafs al-Masri Brigades at the heart of the country," the message continues. "The brothers who are there have assured us that the Brigades have managed to get hold of surface-to-air missiles from Chechnya and these missiles were used last year in the attacks against airports in Great Britain. They have also managed to obtain a quantity of poisonous material to create bombs. God willing, there will be no security in the land of the Romans and the war will be long."

No attacks are known to have been successfully carried out on any airport in Britain, but a month ago, US president George W. Bush said in a speech that the US and "several partners" had disrupted a plot to attack London's Heathrow airport, using a commercial airliner hijacked from a country where security levels were not so high which would be flown into an airport terminal. British newspaper The Sunday Times said the British security services had "detailed intelligence" in February 2003 about a two-pronged plan which also involved a "mortar attack" on a departing plane.

The latest message on the Internet forum then goes on to announce that there will be "news in the next few days and for this we bless our brothers and our Sheikh Suleyman Abu Ghaith for the new birth." The reference to Abu Gheith, a former al-Qaeda spokesman who also disappeared in 2002 (believed to have been arrested in Iran together with al-Adel and one of bin Laden's sons) may not be a casual one. In congratulating Abu Gheith, possibly over the birth of a new son, the author could be trying prove that he really is Sayf al-Adel.

On Monday, the Italian interior minister downplayed the importance of the message, saying it was very short and ungrammatical and "the author could be a Jihadist net surfer who closely follows the European news regarding political violence and draws on it for his message." "Therefore this does not heighten or dampen the terror threat, which continues to cast a shadow over Europe and Italy. For this reason we will continue to keep up our guard."

Italy has the fourth largest contingent of troops in Iraq after the US, Britain and South Korea, though in September three hundred of the 3,000 soldiers were withdrawn. Islamic militants have issued several threats against Italy over the past two years. The Italian authorities have stepped up security around the country's main landmarks and in recent months have carried out simulations of terror attacks Milan and Rome.
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Britain
An in-depth look at the London boomers
2005-08-05
Terrorist attacks on civilians in the heart of London have long been considered inevitable by the UK’s police and intelligence services. For them, the London bombings represent the ultimate security nightmare: young men from Britain’s 1.6 million strong Muslim community willing to kill themselves and their fellow citizens in the country in which they were born. All but one of the men involved in the July 7 attacks were of Pakistani extraction, the other being a Muslim convert of Jamaican descent.

The West Yorkshire Scene

The bombers and their support network hailed from in and around the city of Leeds, West Yorkshire. Leeds lies at the heart of the industrial north of England and like many UK cities with an industrial past, has instituted regeneration programs over the last decade that, on the surface at least, have revitalized its image as a center of culture and business. However, within the Pakistani community – the city’s largest minority group – in excess of 40% possess no qualifications and unemployment is double that of the white population. The city, with its population of 715,000, hosts more than 70 nationalities and one of its most culturally diverse communities is Beeston, an area in the southwest. [1] It is from there that western Europe’s first suicide attacks were planned.

Pakistanis constitute 11 per cent of Beeston’s population and are the largest non-white group in the area. The district is visibly deprived and has 7.8 per cent unemployment against a city average of 3.3%. [2] However, it is not a “sink estate” but a working class district typical of northern England’s industrial cities, with its tight streets and rows of terraced redbrick houses. The area has three mosques, which attract worshippers from all over south Leeds. Beeston, and Leeds in general, has a history of peaceful cross-community relations. This stands in contrast to those in the nearby city of Bradford, and a number of other northern towns, which have experienced race riots involving disaffected Pakistani youths in recent years. The invasion of Iraq and the onset of the “war against terrorism” have challenged members of the wider Muslim community and their disparate and often divided leadership with fundamental questions concerning issues of identity, representation and religious interpretation.

The Terrorist Cell

Mohammed Siddique Khan, a mentor by profession, is regarded by the security services as the senior, dominant figure with operational command over the bombing team – a common attribute of terrorist cells. He was responsible for identifying, cultivating and supporting the three younger men. Khan also took charge of liaising with contacts outside the area and in Pakistan, including the alleged “mastermind”. He was employed as a “learning mentor” at a local primary school between March 2001 and December 2004. Dedicated to his job, he was perceived as a father figure to the disenfranchised young men of Beeston. In a chance interview given to a national newspaper in 2003, he described with disdain how the deprivation in Beeston remained untouched by the city council’s “regeneration” strategy. [3]

The thirty-year old Khan lived with his pregnant wife and 18-month-old daughter and had studied at Leeds University. He had been off work on sick leave since September 2004 and resigned from his job last December. Khan had recently relocated from Beeston to Dewsbury, a small town near Leeds. [4] Back in February 2000, he established a gym with local government money under the rubric of the Kashmiri Welfare Association, which was associated with the Hardy Street mosque in Beeston. [5] The group aimed to keep youths off the streets by involving them in weightlifting. He continued his voluntary youth support activities following his appointment at the local school. However, in the past 18 months he was expelled from the mosque on suspicion of preaching extreme interpretations of Islam to young people. [6]

In 2004, he set up a second gymnasium on Lodge Lane in Beeston in the name of the youth program of the nearby Hamara Centre charitable foundation. [7] In the two months prior to the bombings, the building was closed for renovations, but locals have reported its continued use. All of the bombers are known to have frequented the Lodge Lane building. [8]

Shahzad Tanweer, 22, was a successful sportsman who received good grades at school before going on to study Sports Science at Leeds Metropolitan University. Son of a successful local businessman, Tanweer’s family was relatively prosperous and well respected, though he was effectively unemployed. [9] In November 2004, Tanweer and Mohammed Siddique Khan took the same flight to the Pakistani port city of Karachi. Tanweer had gone to the country, according to his uncle, to learn the Qur’an by heart. Their precise movements upon arrival cannot be confirmed, except that Tanweer traveled to his family’s home village in rural Faisalabad and spent most of his two-month stay there. He studied the Qur’an in the local mosque and spent the majority of his time indoors as he did not feel welcomed as a Briton. His aunt confirmed that his only visitor during his stay was Khan. [10]

They flew back to the UK together in February of this year. At this stage, Tanweer’s relatives noted that he had become more religious; he now had a beard and prayed five times a day. According to his family, Tanweer despaired of UK policy in Kashmir, Iraq and Afghanistan, and he idolized Osama bin Laden. [11] Upon his return from Pakistan, he worked intermittently for his father and both he and Khan volunteered in an Islamic bookstore in Beeston, which also acted as a local drop-in center for youths. [12]

Eighteen-year-old Hasib Hussein left school in July 2003 after five year’s education with no formal qualifications. [13] A keen sportsman, he was unemployed and frustrated by both his lack of options and local facilities to pursue his love of football. He smoked marijuana with his friends and got into occasional fights with white youths. Hussein had performed the Hajj and had become increasingly devout, but remained normal to his friends, although he had shaved his beard prior to the attacks – a common preparatory act amongst Islamists. His father, a devout Muslim who suffered from poor health and had been unable to hold down full-time work, had expressed concern at his relationship with Khan. [14]

Jamaican born 19-year-old carpet fitter Germaine Lindsay recently relocated to his English wife’s hometown of Aylesbury in the south of England. He grew up in West Yorkshire, in the small working class town of Huddersfield, close to Leeds. Lindsay lacked a father figure and converted to Islam following his mother’s relationship with a Muslim. School friends portray him as an intelligent young man “fascinated by world affairs, religion and politics” who changed markedly after his conversion during the summer of his final year at school. Lindsay’s deepening religiosity became increasingly obvious: he studied Urdu, wanted to be known as Jamal, and condemned those who drank alcohol. His sister said that “he was not my brother anymore.” Lindsay’s young wife, also a convert to Islam, was 8 months pregnant with their second child. [15]

A local politician stated that “we know Lindsay used to travel, because the local mosques were too moderate for him.” Lindsay, who was a fitness fanatic, is believed to have met his fellow bombers while attending one of the gyms set up by Khan. Moreover, his best friend revealed that he “had been going to a mosque in London and spoke of the teachings of someone down there.” [16]

Terror Connections

According to various reports, Khan’s name had emerged following a foiled plot to detonate a truck bomb in London in 2004. However, the intelligence services did not further investigate as he was only indirectly linked to one of the alleged plotters. In addition, Israeli reports have alleged that Khan spent a day in Israel in February 2003, leading to speculation that he was linked to the suicide attack perpetrated that April by two British born Pakistanis. An unnamed acquaintance of Khan told a local newspaper that he had traveled abroad frequently. [17]

Two other individuals linked with the investigation have been named as Haroon Rashid Aswad and Majdi al-Nashar, but their alleged roles remain unconfirmed. On July 21, it was reported and later denied that Aswad, 30, who was originally from Dewsbury, West Yorkshire, had been arrested by Pakistani authorities in Islamabad. Police allege that he is the mastermind of the operation and is said to have made around 20 phone calls to the bombers Khan and Shehzad Tanweer in the months leading up to the attacks before flying out of London before July 7. [18] Aswad’s family stated that he had not lived in the family home, nor had they had contact with him, for around ten years. He is believed to reside in London. [19] One local press report said that he is a former aide to the radical London cleric Abu Hamza al-Masri. [20]

Egyptian national Majdi al-Nashar is linked to a flat in which the homemade explosives were manufactured. A devoted Muslim, he headed the Islamic Society at Leeds University, though one of its members said that he did not propagate extreme views. [21] The Islamist community in both Egypt and London also stated that they had never heard of him following his arrest in Cairo. [22] Although suspicion initially fell upon Al-Nashar, who was awarded a Ph.D. in Chemistry from Leeds University this year, he claims to have let the flat out to someone from London. This may have been Germaine Lindsay, whom he knew through attendance at a central mosque in Leeds, or Aswad, who local press allege visited the Yorkshire area after entering the country from abroad in the weeks before the attacks. [23]

Islamists and Counterterrorism

The attacks were claimed in two separate statements, one by the hitherto unknown Secret Group of Al-Qaeda of Jihad Organization in Europe and another by the Abu Hafs al-Masri Brigades, who have previously threatened European states. Occurring as they did on the day of the G8 summit, the bombers would have wanted to convey their fury at UK and U.S. policy in Iraq. This makes the first statement more credible. Yasser al-Sirri of the Islamic Observation Centre in London discredited this claim as “it contradicts the language and literature of al-Qaeda” with its poor Arabic, misquotations of the Qur’an and its use of terminology. [24] Yet these very elements of the posting, which are usually written in the erudite Salafi-Jihadi language of al-Qaeda, indicate that even at the planning stage, and although there are connections with Pakistan, this was an all-British affair. On top of this, the claim stated that Britain is on fire in its “northern, southern, eastern and western quarters” reflecting the bombers intended direction on the London Underground, before Hasib Hussein discovered the Northern Line was temporarily suspended and took a bus. [25]

The reaction to the blasts among the UK’s Islamist community has reflected the fact that the attacks will severely affect their future status in this country. Hizb ut-Tahrir condemned the bombings, as did Yasser al-Sirri, who stated that the goal was “illegitimate” and that “God says if anyone wants to do something [against a country] he must leave that country and fight them outside. He can go to Iraq and fight the American forces there, or British forces, but he shouldn’t kill [British civilians].” [26] Other prominent London-based figures refrained from comment, though the website of Muhammad al-Massari’s Islamic Renewal Organization later posted one of the claims of responsibility and was promptly disrupted.

The only tacit endorsements came from Anjem Choudary, former UK secretary of the now defunct al-Muhajiroun – whose spiritual leader recently claimed that the “covenant of security” between Islamists and the British state had expired – when he refused to condemn the attacks, and from Hani al-Siba’i, Director of the Al-Maqrizi Centre for Historical Studies. Hani al-Siba’i stated on al-Jazeera television that if al-Qaeda was responsible for the attacks, which he did not believe was the case, than “it would be a great victory for [al-Qaeda] and it would have rubbed the noses of the heads of eight countries [G-8] in the dirt.” [27]

The UK’s counter-terrorism policy is now under heightened scrutiny with demands for robust action. In response to the attacks, the government has announced an extra £10 million for the police, who will increase the number of Special Branch officers. MI5, the domestic intelligence service, had already been steadily increasing its numbers back to Cold War levels before the attacks and may receive an additional monetary injection, particularly following some well-calibrated comments to the press. It recently established a Joint Terrorism Analysis Centre to smooth cooperation between the different intelligence services after the debacle over intelligence related to the Iraq WMD claim. It is has also launched an Urdu language version of its website and, in recognition of the threat, is in the process of establishing eight regional offices, including one in Leeds, which it hopes will attract young Asian recruits. [28]

Current UK anti-terrorist legislation is already rigorous and controversially allows the detention of terrorism suspects without trial. High court judges regularly review such cases and suspects can now be released and made subject to “control orders” that limit their movements and contacts. In the wake of the London attacks, a global list of terrorism suspects has been proposed and new counter-terrorism laws aimed at further squeezing the Islamist community in London and its communications network are being drawn up for fast-tracking in the upcoming parliamentary session.

Intelligence officials admit that they are at the same “level of penetration” amongst the Muslim community now as they were with the Irish republican community in the early 1970s, when the Provisional IRA acted with impunity. It took twenty years to effectively infiltrate the IRA, but that was a structured organization supported by a tiny community with distinct and realistic political goals. Now the potential pool of recruits is massive and the enemy is young British Muslim “clean skins” who are engaged in what appears to be a global struggle.
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Britain
Abu Hafs al Masri Brigade claims responsibility for London blasts
2005-07-22
A statement posted Friday on an Islamic Web site in the name of an al-Qaida-linked group claimed responsibility for latest blasts targeting London's transport system. The group, Abu Hafs al Masri Brigade, also claimed responsibility for the July 7 bombings that killed 52 people and four suicide bombers. The statement's authenticity could not be immediately verified and there has been doubt cast over the veracity of the group's past claims.
"Our strikes in the depths of the capital of the British infidels our only a message to other European governments that we will not relent and sit idle before the infidel soldiers will leave the land of the two rivers," said the statement.

The "two rivers" in the statement refer to Iraq's Euphrates and Tigris rivers. On Tuesday, another statement was issued in the name of the same group threatening to launch "a bloody war" on the capitals of European countries that do not remove their troops from Iraq within a month.
"While we bless these strikes, our next attacks will be Hellish for the enemies of God," said the latest statement. "We will strike in the hearts of European capitals, in Rome, in Amsterdam and in Denmark where their soldiers are in still in Iraq pursuing their British and American masters," the statement added.

The Abu Hafs al Masri Brigades are named after the alias given to Mohammed Atef, Osama bin Laden's top deputy who was killed in a U.S. airstrike in Afghanistan in November 2001. Experts have said that the group has no proven track record of attacks, and note it has claimed responsibility for events in which it was unlikely to have played any role, such as the 2003 blackouts in the United States and London that resulted from technical problems.
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Europe
Abu Hafs al-Masri Brigades issues ultimatum to Europe
2005-07-19
The Al-Qaeda terror network warned European nations to pull their troops out of Iraq within a month or face more attacks like the deadly London bombings, according to an Internet statement.

"This message is the final warning to European states. We want to give you a one-month deadline to bring your soldiers out from the land of Mesopotamia (Iraq)," said the statement signed by Al-Qaeda group the Abu Hafs al-Masri Brigades and dated July 16.

After August 15, "there will be no more messages, just actions that will be engraved on the heart of Europe.

"It will be a bloody war in the service of God," said the statement, the authenticity of which could not be verified.

"It's a message we are addressing to the crusaders who are still present in Iraq -- Denmark, the Netherlands, Britain, Italy and those other countries whose troops continue to criss-cross Iraqi territory.

"These are our last words. The mujahedeen, who are on the lookout, will have other words to say in your capitals."

A statement issued in the name of the "Europe Division" of the same Al-Qaeda group claimed responsibility for the July 7 bombings on London's public transport system which killed at least 56 people and wounded some 700.

The same group also claimed the 2004 train bombings in Madrid and the 2003 attacks in Istanbul.

"After the laudable strikes that have shaken London and the cities of other Crusaders still present in Iraq, we have renewed the ultimatum that we had given," the statement said.

"We give you all one month to reflect carefully on your policy towards Islam and Muslims.

"We're giving you this deadline so that you stop running behind the United States and the Zionists, without paying attention to the blood that has been shed and continues to be shed in the land of Islam -- in Iraq, Afghanistan and Palestine."

The statement came amid intense debate in Britain over the role the 2003 invasion of Iraq played in spurring the four British suicide bombers to carry out the deadly attacks.

In a Guardian/ICM poll published Tuesday, two-thirds of respondents said they saw a link, while three-quarters said they considered further attacks likely.

But the government of Prime Minister Tony Blair has continued to deny that the war left Britain more vulnerable to terror attacks, despite a damning report from the respected think-tank, the Royal Institute of International Affairs.
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Britain
The Conundrum of the London bombings
2005-07-16
As Terrorism Focus went to press the identity of the perpetrators of the attacks on London commuters on July 7 — indigenous UK suicide bombers of Pakistani ethnic origin — had become established through forensic investigation and extensive analysis of CCTV footage. While there are indications that two of the suspects had recently returned from Pakistan, the presumed link with al-Qaeda has still to be confirmed, since the evidence has not yet been paired with verifiable statements, either from al-Qaeda and affiliated groups, leaving speculation open.

Internet postings, one of the more efficient and accessible means of publishing claims of responsibility, did not provide much in the way of authoritative information. The first was from a previously unknown group calling itself the Jama'at al-Tanzim al-Sirri or ‘Secret Operations Group, the Organization of al-Qaeda in Europe' (Jama'at al-Tanzim al-Sirri Tanzim Qa'idat al-Jihad fi Urubba) which posted on the al-Qal'a forum, which in the past has hosted bona fide statements from militant mujahideen groups. However, the lack of subsequent postings backing up the statement, indeed the unusual paucity of supporting material, whether on the internet or the satellite media, given the importance of the attacks, cast immediate doubt on its authenticity. While the statement contained the now familiar language of past warnings made and ignored, and the typical disclaimer ‘He who gives warning is exempt' [i.e from moral condemnation as to the consequences] and an (incomplete) Qur'anic citation, the text lacked the full paraphernalia of doctrinal justification which would have been expected for such a momentous event. More revealing still was the clumsy anomaly of the language used in the opening salvo:

"I give glad tidings, O Nation of Islam, I give glad tidings, O nation of Arabs [ya ummat al-‘Aruba], that the time for revenge against the Crusader and Zionist British government has come, in response to the massacre carried out by Great Britain in Iraq and Afghanistan"

Appealing to an ethnicity in the word ‘Aruba (which is a term also equivalent to ‘Arabism') flies full in the face of the ideology and aims of al-Qaeda, the word ‘Aruba conjuring up images of Arab Nationalism, an ideology which par excellence was conceived as a rallying point that specifically sidelined religious identities. Within hours of this posting, the al-Qal'a forum closed, according to the forum administrators, despite their protests of innocence [www.qal3ati.net].

A second posting, a declaration of the ‘Abu Hafs al-Masri Brigades, the Qaeda (‘Base') of Jihad, Europe Brigade', posted on the Tajdeed forum, celebrated the "attacks one after the other in the capital of the Infidels, the English capital 
 The beginning was at Madrid and Istanbul 
 today [it is] in London 
 and tomorrow the Mujahideen will have other words [to say]" [www.tajdeed.org.uk]. But this also presented similar problems of style, not least due to the identification of the group itself. This has long been a problem, since it is somewhat ‘trigger-happy' with internet postings. The group also posted a similar claim after the Madrid train bombings. Yet after a year of investigations no evidence of any such group being involved has emerged. The same story is true of the Istanbul bombings of November 2003 and August 2004, with subsequent investigations turning up no trace of the Brigades (see Terrorism Focus, Volume 1, Issue 2).

Sympathizers with jihadi militants, along with terrorism analysts, were equally divided on the rationale behind the timing and purpose of the attack. Parallels with the March 2004 Madrid bombings only went so far, since the political conditions of the United Kingdom in July 2005 have nothing in common with April 2004 in Spain. At that time the Spanish government was facing a hostile domestic environment at election time, where a carefully timed strike brought political upheaval and resulted in the withdrawal of Spanish troops from Iraq. Al-Qaeda, in practice, has used astute utilitarian calculation in organizing its strikes, and has abhorred politically damaging, opportunistic attacks, such as that which occurred in the bombing of the theater in the Qatari capital Doha (see Focus, Volume 2, Issue 7). On this yardstick, the London attacks are a strategic disaster.

Yet the perception that ‘London was next' stems from a reading of al-Qaeda published materials. In December 2004 a strategy document "Iraq al-Jihad, Aamaal wa-Akhtaar" (Iraq's Jihad, Hopes and Dangers) appeared on the web confidently predicting the Madrid debacle and estimating that "Britain will only withdraw from Iraq in one of two cases: either if Britain suffers significant human casualties in Iraq, or if Spain and Italy withdraws first." Subsequent strategy documents have emphasized the need to "exhaust the enemy's forces by stretching them through dispersal of targets" and "attract the youth through exemplary targeting" as part of the preliminary ‘Disruption and Exhaustion' phase of a strategy towards ‘Empowerment.' Outlined in the work The Management of Barbarism (for a detailed analysis of this document see Focus, Volume 2, Issue 6).

For Hani al-Sibai, an Egyptian radical Islamist dissident resident in the United Kingdom, the London subway bombings were more particularly focused, and designed rather to steal the thunder from the G8 Conference in Scotland. Speaking during a combative interview with the Qatari satellite channel Al-Jazeera, al-Sibai declared it "a great victory for al-Qaeda; it rubbed the noses of the world's eight most powerful countries in the mud."

Other mujahideen sympathizers were not so sure. Immediately following the first posting by the Secret Operations Group, one signing himself ‘Bu Badr' on the Tajdeed forum warned against his fellow mujahideen indulging in too much applause, noting that "those who defend al-Qaeda actually live in Britain" which "gathered in our Muslim brothers who had been expelled from their countries due to their opinion and views opposing their regimes 
 Our brothers in al-Qaeda are too clever to strike the thugs in their own country." For this commentator, another candidate was more suspect: "This is [simply] a game played by the swine Blair in order to strike at Muslims and Muslim refugees 
 a plot to put pressure of the expatriate Muslim Arab communities, and enable the passing of legislation to expel our Muslim brothers from Britain and hand them over to their agents, the ruling regimes in the Middle East" [www.tajdeed.org.uk].

In so doing, the jihadist commentator highlighted the unusual position in the United Kingdom. London hosts more militant members than almost any city outside the Middle East, where radical Islamic clerics, some of them refugees themselves, have until recently become increasingly outspoken on matters reflecting no longer on external politics relating to their countries of origin, but on issues focused internally. The self-styled sheikhs Abu Hamza and Omar Bakri Muhammad have been the most vociferous of these, the former achieving notoriety for his alleged call to kill the then Prime Minister John Major, and the latter for his comments last April to the Portuguese journal Público, where, styling himself the "Leader of Londonistan", he underlined how "several freelance Islamic militant groups are preparing attacks on London" and that "one very well organized group" in London calling itself ‘al-Qaeda Europe' "has a great appeal for young Muslims 
 I know that they are ready to launch a big operation" [www.publico.clix.pt]. In each case, however, the sheikhs have sought to protect themselves, at least in terms of the media, by talking of a unilaterally agreed "mu'ahada" (agreement) not to engage in targeting their host country themselves or encouraging others to do so.

Over the recent period the horizon has been darkening for ideologues of this stamp. Abu Hamza is now under arrest and has been indicted in the United States on charges of trying to set up a jihad training camp in Oregon. Omar Bakri Muhammad meanwhile continues to balance on the fine line of legality, boasting of having been arrested, and released, 16 times over his activities, which he ascribes to ‘the contradictions of laws made by man."

If in further investigations of the British suicide bombers there fails to emerge an identified ‘trigger' for the operation — which would indicate al-Qaeda methodology — and it turns out to be an entirely UK-organized operation, the issue of the timing and purpose of the attack will have to be sought in developments indigenous to Britain. Jihadi commentators on the forums have already mused on the bombings coming two days after the commencement of the trial of Abu Hamza on charges including inciting racial hatred and encouraging the murder of non-Muslims. If there is a connection, the question to be resolved is whether the extremist, radical wing of Islamists in exile have come to feel that their unilateral ‘compact' is being eroded and that there is now nothing to lose. Failing that, the possibility always remains that questions of timing are irrelevant, and that the motivation was ongoing jihad against the infidel, pure and simple.
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Terror Networks & Islam
‘From Madrid to London: Al-Qaeda Exports the War in Iraq to Europe’
2005-07-13
Very interesting piece by an israeli site with high standards; apparently, Italy could be next; see link for further references.
By Reuven Paz *
* Director and Editor of the Project for the Research of Islamist Movements (PPISM).

Introduction

The bombings in London 's public transportation system on July 7 th 2005 are too similar to the March 11 th 2004 Madrid explosions, consisting of 10 explosive devices aboard four commuter trains during rush hour to ignore the possible connection. The nature of the attacks; the lack of the element of martyrdom; the two declarations of responsibility by “Al-Qaeda's Secret Group in Europe,” and by the “Abu Hafs al-Masri Brigades;” and, above all, the clear link to the Islamist insurgency in Iraq, all—point at a Moroccan/Algerian cell or grouping that is carrying out the global strategy and doctrines of Al-Qaeda. Whereas the orders and the operational planning did not necessarily stem from the Al-Qaeda leadership in Afghanistan , Pakistan or elsewhere, the strategy did.
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Britain
Al-Qaeda ordered London attack in May 29 internet message
2005-07-12
The Islamist extremist group, al-Qaeda, ordered attacks on Europe in a May 29 internet message that the Spanish secret service forwarded to their British counterparts at the weekend, reported a Spanish newspaper on Monday. The Spanish national intelligence centre sent a copy of the Arabic-language message - signed by "Abu Hafs al-Masri Brigades - European division" - on Saturday to the British intelligence service MI5, and it was also published on Saturday by the daily El Mundo. The message, entitled "Letter to Mujahedeen in Europe", stated in part: "We now call on the mujahedeen around the world to launch the expected attack".

El Mundo wrote that Spanish intelligence officials believed this was a reference to the attacks in London last Thursday. The newspaper reported that the Spanish secret service had been examining the statements of the European division of Abu Hafs al-Masri Brigades, named after an al-Qaeda leader who was killed in Afghanistan, since the Madrid bombings.
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Britain
Terror plot known weeks ago
2005-07-11
AL-QAEDA threatened to launch attacks in Europe in an internet warning posted five weeks before the London terrorist bombings that British intelligence services claimed to have no knowledge about.
But the Spanish secret service only forwarded the May 29 message to Britain's MI5 spy agency at the weekend -- two days after the attacks.

The Spanish national intelligence centre, called CNI, sent a copy of the Arabic-language message - signed by "Abu Hafs al-Masri Brigades - European division" - on Saturday to MI5, according to Spain's El Mundo newspaper.

The same group - named after an al-Qaedaleader who was killed in Afghanistan - claimed responsibility for the Madrid train bombings of March 11 last year, in which 191 people died, and twin bombings in Istanbul in November 2003 that killed 63 people.

The message, entitled "Letter to mujahedeen in Europe", states in part: "We now call on the mujahedeen around the world to launch the expected attack". Spanish intelligence officials believe this was a reference to the attacks in London last Thursday, which claimed at least 49 lives and wounded more than 700.

The revelation came as it emerged the severed head of a man had been found near the bus torn apart at Tavestock Place in the London bombings, strengthening suspicions that a suicide bomber was behind the blast. Suicide attacks in Israel have shown that a head is often the only remnant of a suicide bomber, as an explosion close to the torso can force the head to fly up and remain intact while the rest of the body disintegrates.

London's Daily Telegraph reported yesterday that the head found near the bus had almost certainly been blown out of the upper deck where a rucksack-sized bomb is believed to have been planted on a seat. The head may be that of an innocent passenger who picked the bomb up just before it exploded, but police have believed from the start that the bus could have been hit by a suicide bomber.

One passenger who got off the bus just before the explosion had noticed a nervous young man behaving oddly on the bus and frequently dipping into a bag at his feet.

Investigators are convinced that three other terrorists escaped after leaving bombs on three Underground trains about 47 minutes before the bus blast.

British Prime Minister Tony Blair yesterday rejected Opposition calls for an inquiry into whether the bombings could have been prevented, saying it would disrupt the hunt for perpetrators.

Home Office Minister Hazel Blears said the "last thing" the security services needed was an inquiry, as they were too busy with a massive investigation into the bombings.

"Security services and the police have actually protected us for many years. They have disrupted a lot of operations. It is impossible to anticipate everything," she said.

A spokesman for Mr Blair, who was due to present an update on the bombings in a statement to parliament overnight, said: "The Prime Minister has confidence in the intelligence services and he won't be holding an inquiry."

Britain's terrorism threat status was yesterday raised to its highest level yet as police believe the rush-hour bombers are alive and planning another attack.
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Britain
Manhunt builds picture of the London killers
2005-07-10
Gradually a picture is starting to build up. There was no lone suicide bomber. There was no one terrorist acting on his own. The probability is that the worst terrorist attack in Britain was carried out by at least a four-person cell using synchronised explosive devices attached to timers.

And Britain might not have been the only target. There is evidence that atrocities were also being planned in Italy and possibly in Denmark.

Article continues
Such knowledge will not cheer the 100 senior police officers, drawn from forces across the world, who this weekend descended on the headquarters of the Metropolitan Police in London in a bid to share intelligence on the attacks.

But it will help the intelligence agencies start to obtain a clearer idea of what they are up against - and who they are looking for.

The unprecedented meeting of the world's senior police officers will be chaired by the Metropolitan Police's Assistant Commissioner, Andy Hayman, the man who is heading the investigation into the London bombings.

'You can never over-estimate the value of a briefing from overseas partners,' Hayman said yesterday. 'We wanted to be joined up because this type of terrorism affects the world.'

Officers from 32 countries including France, Italy, Australia, Israel, America, the Czech Republic, Japan, the Netherlands, Turkey, the United States and Switzerland are attending the summit. They also include a delegation from Spain, whose officers are hoping to share knowledge gleaned after the Madrid bombings.

One security source said: 'We learnt after Madrid that it is important to get a scrum down early on and swap information.'

The emergency meeting comes after Italian police yesterday arrested 142 people as part of an anti-terror operation in Milan, which was launched almost immediately after the London attack. One and a half kilograms of explosive were recovered in raids involving more than 2,000 Carabinieri and directly aimed at boosting security at underground stations in the city.

Later it emerged that an unknown al-Qaeda group, which last week claimed responsibility for the London bombings on a website, had threatened Italy and Denmark with similar attacks, although its credibility has been questioned.

Meanwhile, in Dubai a group claiming links to al- Qaeda also revealed in an internet statement that it was behind the London attacks. 'A group of mujahideen from the Abu Hafs al-Masri Brigades delivered one blow after the other in the infidels' capital, the capital of the English,' said the statement signed by the group. It is the third such claim by different groups.

Yesterday police revealed that, contrary to earlier reports, the bombs on the underground had not occurred over a 30-minute period as had been previously thought. There had been speculation that this meant a solo bomber could have placed the devices on the tube trains.

But after analysing technical data provided by the London Underground, the police confirmed the three devices detonated within moments of each other.

'We can clarify the position that the three bombs exploded almost simultaneously,' said Scotland Yard Deputy Assistant Commissioner Brian Paddick.

'Maybe that lends more towards timing devices than people actually with the bombs manually detonating. But we are not ruling out either possibility,' Paddick said. He declined to comment on whether a timer had been found at the scene of one explosion.

Privately, intelligence experts say they now believe the London Underground data suggests at least four terrorists were at work last week. The fact that the type of explosives used was not hand-made, but small 10lb commercial high explosives, probably linked to a timing device, suggests a level of sophistication and financing.

MI5 is combing through its files and is believed to be focusing on almost 100 suspects who could have carried out the operation.

Meanwhile experts at Qinetiq, the government's former research agency, are to begin creating computer simulations that will show the locations of where the bombs were planted and the directions of the blast.

Their work has been made all the more crucial by the revelation that the CCTV system on the Number 30 bus had not been working since June. The broken camera is bound to cause consternation over the condition of the 6,000 CCTV cameras installed on the underground. Around 500 officers are now helping to scrutinise the footage.

Yesterday forensic experts continued to pore over the sites of the four bomb blasts. The government's Forensic Science Services agency has removed thousands of samples to its laboratory in Birmingham and several Metropolitan Police facilities in the capital for processing.

But the forensics work is hampered by the grim conditions in the Piccadilly underground system, located 500 metres from King's Cross. The tunnel near Russell Square in London's Bloomsbury district remains unsafe in the immediate area around the blast. Engineers are concerned that the crucial steel lining that strengthens the tunnel, which has been bored through clay, may have been ruptured in the blast. They are currently considering a plan to drag several carriages down the track to obtain access to the wrecked first carriage in the train where the bomb went off. It is believed that more than 20 bodies are still trapped in the wreckage.

A specialist team of senior police officers, coroners and medical experts is now trying to ensure that the bodies are correctly identified.

The daily meetings of the newly formed Identification Commission will take place at an undisclosed military site in central London, where a temporary mortuary has been set up.

Led by Westminster coroner Dr Paul Knapman, Scotland Yard's senior identification manager, Detective Superintendent Jim Dickie, and Home Office pathologist, Rob Chapman, the commission will be supported by a team of hundreds of police staff and other experts, many of whom have experience of major terrorist attacks or natural disasters, including the devastating Asian tsunami on Boxing Day.

The commission will oversee a painstaking and complex identification process using fingerprints, dentistry and DNA to conclusively identify the victims. Experts said that it may take weeks to identify some of the bodies. Police are currently checking the details on their Holmes missing persons database.
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