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Recent Appearances... Rantburg

Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Pro-Islamic State Gathering On Temple Mount Filmed By Israeli TV
2014-09-05
[IsraelTimes] Israel's Channel 10 on Wednesday night broadcast what it said was footage from a recent "Islamic State gathering" on the Temple Mount in Jerusalem.

The report, which is to be broadcast in full next week, said the gathering underlined that Islamic State intends to focus on Israel in the future.

Formally, the gathering, attended by thousands, was organized by the Tahrir party, which the report described as being the "Paleostine branch" of Islamic State.
For all the shouts of victory, Hamas lost big to Israel, so another strong horse must be found.
Speakers were filmed
Prob'ly not just by Channel 10...
anticipating the liberation of Jerusalem and decrying Jewish pollution of the city. Several black IS flags were seen in the footage.

The footage was filmed on a recent Friday, the report said.

The news hound, Zvi Yehezkeli, said a photograph of a Paleostinian youngster holding an IS flag that proliferated on social media over the past week was taken next to where he was standing.
Click on the headline, above, to see the photo.
Yehezkeli said he had expected to be stopped by Israeli Police when he tried to enter the Mount area at a time designated for Moslem prayers, and that it was frightening to be in the plaza while the IS gathering was taking place.

He claimed that the Islamic State, "now knocking on Jordan's door, has marked 'Paleostine' as the next target on its list."
It's an ancient tradition: Joshua sent spies into Jericho, after all.
The group has made large gains in Syria and Iraq, where it has been targeted by US Arclight airstrikes.

On Wednesday, an Israeli foreign ministry spokesperson wrote on twitter that Steven Sotloff, an American journalist beheaded by IS in a video released a day earlier, held Israeli citizenship. The Foreign Ministry declined to confirm the information.

Sotloff, a Jewish native of Miami and the grandson of Holocaust survivors, came to Israel in 2008 to pursue an undergraduate degree at the Interdisciplinary Center in Herzliya.
Another Times of Israel report adds:
Paleostinians from the Gazoo Strip and the West Bank have joined the ranks of the Islamic State group, Channel 2 reported Thursday, citing intelligence sources.

The report came a day after Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon formally designated the organization a terror group, along with Al-Qaeda affiliate Abdallah Azzam Brigades.

That move enables Israel to act against the organizations by prohibiting gatherings, recruitment, fundraising and other activities, Israel Radio reported.

The step was taken upon the recommendation of the Shin Bet, possibly to grant the organization legal tools to deal with Paleostinian jihadis who might return from fighting in the group’s ranks in Syria and Iraq.
Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Hezbollah ambush kills three bomb experts in Qalamoun
2014-03-24
[Beirut Daily Star] A Hezbollah ambush Sunday killed three rebels who were experts in preparing boom-mobiles along with four of their bodyguards in the strategic Qalamoun region of Syria near the Lebanese border, a source close to the party said.

Also Sunday, a senior Hezbollah official said the Syrian army's recent recapture of the town of Yabroud, the last strategic rebel stronghold in the Qalamoun mountains, would curb boom-mobileings and suicide kabooms in Leb.

"A special Hezbollah unit infiltrated 11 kilometers deep inside rebel-held territory in the Qalamoun region and planted bombs inside the garden of a house frequented by the three car-rigging experts," the source told The Daily Star.

"When the three rigging experts arrived along with four bodyguards at 10:45 a.m. Sunday, the bombs were detonated, which resulted in the killing of the three along with their four bodyguards."

The three rigging experts were identified as Ahmad Ali Hamra, Farid Mohammad Kheir Jumaa and Hussam Masoud Hammoud.

Hezbollah's Al-Manar TV, quoting a senior security source, said the military operation in Qalamoun targeted "security officials of an gang responsible for sending bomb-rigged cars to Leb."

The operation bears the hallmarks of Hezbollah's use of roadside kabooms against Israeli troops and their allied Lebanese bully boyz during Israel's 18-year occupation of a border strip in south Leb that ended in 2000.

Syrian regime forces, backed by Hezbollah fighters, recaptured the border town of Yabroud on March 16, dealing a heavy military blow to rebels and severing their supply lines from Leb.

It was the second major victory in the area after Syrian Hereditary President-for-Life Bashir Pencilneck al-Assad
Scourge of Qusayr...
's troops, also backed by Hezbollah fighters, captured the key rebel-held town of Qusair near the border with Leb last year.

Hezbollah officials have accused rebel groups entrenched in Yabroud of rigging vehicles with explosives and sending them to Leb.

Leb has been rattled by a wave of deadly boom-mobileings and suicide attacks carried out by Al-Qaeda-affiliated groups targeting mainly Shiite areas in Beirut's southern suburbs and the Bekaa Valley. The attacks also targeted the Iranian Embassy
...You will never find a more wretched hive of scum and villainy!...
and the Iranian Cultural Center in Beirut.

Lebanese and Syrian Al-Qaeda-linked groups, such as the Nusra Front, the Islamic State of Iraq and Greater Syria (ISIS) and the Abdallah Azzam Brigades, have vowed to attack Hezbollah and Iranian targets in Leb in retaliation for their intervention in Syria.

Hezbollah's deputy leader Sheikh Naim Qassem
... the Grand Vizier of the Hezbullies...
said the defeat of Syrian rebels at the hands of Syrian forces, backed by Hezbollah fighters, in Yabroud would stem the wave of suicide and boom-mobileings in Leb.

"Perhaps some are not paying much attention to the big achievement made in the Qalamoun region or Yabroud. These achievements will certainly reduce to a large extent the number of deadly cars and the devil's jacket wallahs," Qassem told a memorial ceremony in Beirut's southern suburbs.

Calling for additional vigilance against would-be suicide bombers, he said: "These are very important steps to protect Leb, its security, stability and independence."

Yabroud is a strategic prize because of its proximity to the highway and the Lebanese border, across which the Syrian rebels have smuggled fighters and weapons.

Qassem called for Lebanese unity to face two dangers threatening Leb: one from Israel and the other from takfiri
...an adherent of takfir wal hijra, an offshoot of Salafism that regards everybody who doesn't agree with them as apostates who most be killed...
groups.

"These two dangers concern all the Lebanese and all residents in the Arab world and the Mohammedan world," he said.

" Israel attacks, occupies and confiscates lands and steps up its actions in harming the Paleostinians," Qassem said. "The takfiris attack, destroy and damage life. They do not carry any project except that of killings and ending human life on Earth."

"We have to close ranks in order to face these two dangers," he said. "God willing, we will be victorious."
Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
New car kaboom in Hezbollah neighborhood in Beirut
2014-01-02
BEIRUT: Five people were killed and 75 others were wounded Thursday when a car bomb ripped through a neighborhood of the Beirut southern suburbs where Hezbollah enjoys broad support, security sources told The Daily Star.

The car bombing in Haret Hreik, a densely populated neighborhood of the southern suburb, is the latest security incident to hit increasingly volatile Lebanon. The attacks are linked to the ongoing crisis in Syria, particularly Hezbollah’s military support there to President Bashar Assad.

The 4.15 p.m. blast caused plumes of black smoke to blanket the Beirut skyline as ambulances and paramedics rushed to the neighborhood. Parked vehicles and buildings in the commercial, residential area were severely damaged in the blast.

Hundreds of residents flocked to the area to help pull out the dead and wounded from the rubble. However, minutes after the explosion gunshots were fired in the air to disperse the crowds.

The Lebanese Army also urged citizens to evacuate the area in the event of another explosion.

Hezbollah MP Hasan Fadlallah said the blast occurred meters away from the party's political council, saying "the target of the attack was Lebanon, its security, stability and national unity."
In his mind Hezbollah and Lebanon are one and the same...
“[Lebanon is facing] a major battle in the face of terrorism that does not exclude anyone and aims to incite sectarian and confessional strife among Lebanese so that it [Lebanon] can be part of what is happening in the region,” caretaker Health Minister Ali Hasan Khalil told reporters at the blast site.

Forensic experts and investigators suspect the explosives-rigged vehicle was a Grand Cherokee, security sources said, adding that the vehicle was parked on Al-Areed Street at the time of detonation.
A full sized SUV for a full sized kaboom. Wonder if it had leather and the optional nav system...
Thursday’s blast comes only days after a car bomb in Downtown Beirut killed former Minister Mohammad Shatah and seven others.

The bulk of attacks linked to the crisis next door have targeted areas loyal to Hezbollah, Syria and Iran’s primary ally in Lebanon. On Nov. 19, two suicide bombers targeted Iran’s Embassy in Beirut, killing over a dozen people including an Iranian diplomat. The attack was claimed by the Abdallah Azzam Brigades, an Al-Qaeda offshoot headed by Saudi national Majid al-Majid. The group warned of further attacks until Hezbollah withdrew its fighters from Syria.
Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Beirut bombers linked to Iran: expert
2013-11-21
[ENGLISH.ALARABIYA.NET] The Lebanese branch of Abdallah Azzam Brigades, which claimed responsibility for two blasts at the Iranian embassy in Beirut on Tuesday, was established by Iranian intelligence services after 2003, a Middle East counter terrorism expert said.

Speaking to Al Arabiya News Channel, Mustafa Alani, a senior advisor and program director in security and terrorism studies at the Gulf Research Center, said the Lebanese branch of Abdullah Azzam Brigades is named Ziad al-Jarrah Battalion.

Al-Jarrah was the Lebanese citizen behind one of the Sept. 11 attacks on the United States. He was the pilot of United Airlines Flight 93, which crashed into a field in Shanksville, Penn.

Abdullah Azzam Brigades also operated a branch in Gulf Peninsula named Yusuf al-Uyayree Battalion, suspected behind the 2010 attack on a Japanese tanker in the Strait of Hormuz. Iran had previously threatened to block the strait if the United States or Israel attacked its nuclear facilities.

Alani, the counter terrorism expert, said the Abdallah Azzam Brigades was originally formed by Saleh al-Qaraawi in 2009 as an offshoot of al-Qaeda in Iraq. It then embraced the previously existing Ziad al-Jarrah Battalion.

Qarawi is a Saudi citizen holds number 43 in the list 85 most-wanted terrorists issued by the Saudi Interior Ministry in 2009.

Qarawi had moved between Iran, Afghanistan and Waziristan, a mountainous region of northeast Pakistan. He was arrested in June 2009 after returning to Saudi Arabia from Pakistan where he was reportedly wounded in a drone strike.

After Qarawi's arrest, Majid bin Muhammad al-Majid, took over the Abdullah Azzam Brigades. Majid, a Saudi citizen, is the wanted number 70 in Saudi Arabia's most wanted terrorists.

Majed al-Majed previously worked with Osbat al-Ansar, a terrorist group that operates in Lebanon.

The brigades' name was linked to several operations, including a 2005 attack on two U.S. warships at the port of Aqaba in Jordan, Jordan.

In 2011, and amid a wave of uprisings across the Middle East, Abdullah Azzam Brigades issued a statement urging Saudis to rise up against their monarchy and threatened attacks against the kingdom.
Link


Terror Networks & Islam
Jihad: Who's joining, and why - and should we care?
2005-08-04
This is the second part of an article I posted here Tuesday. It's pretty good, but again is mainly for the general public, not for WoT sophisticates like many of RB's regulars. But still, it does have some good stuff in it.

In Tuesday's edition, a report in this space looked at the origins and goals of Islamist militancy, and of Al Qaeda in particular. This briefing explores how the movement is evolving at a time of concern about terror cells in Western cities such as London. Is the global jihad spreading to Europe?

It seems clear that this is happening. Events like the London bombings, as well as online postings by Islamist extremists calling Muslim brethren in Western countries to action, suggest to many counterterrorism experts that the global jihad has entered a new phase. All of the members of the London terror cells were longtime residents of Britain, and some were born there, confirming the view that Islamist extremism has taken root. While attacks appear to have ebbed in places such as Indonesia, they have spread to what experts consider the fertile ground of the "ummah" or Islamic community of Europe.

Who is joining the jihad?

Experts don't foresee jihadism becoming a mass movement. Still, if the Al Qaeda ideology hooks a few hundred followers in countries with many Muslim immigrants, that is enough to wreak havoc. Recruitment in Europe is fueled by the sense of isolation and disappointment in Western culture.

Another factor may be freedom of speech. Hate-filled rhetoric and extremist ideals have been spread in European mosques and over the airwaves, some experts point out, even as the governments of these countries have pressed Muslim nations to curb the freedom and teachings of radical clerics.

Is the same thing happening in America?

Perhaps not, or at least not as fast. Mainstream Muslim organizations in America note that US Muslims differ from their counterparts in Europe - they are generally more prosperous (often from more prosperous backgrounds in their home countries) and less confined to Muslim ghettos. Still, experts point out that the British Islamist bombers were not living in poverty. The key problem appears to be alienation that opens minds to radical thinking. And in that sense, America may have a problem. Recent cases in Virginia and California involving clerics allegedly recruiting young Muslims for jihad suggest the dissemination of extremist ideals exists in isolated cases.

Are new groups emerging as Al Qaeda franchises, such as in Egypt?

The word "franchise" can be useful, hinting at how Al Qaeda might inspire or indirectly fund an attack without organizing it. But the word is misleading if it implies that terrorists are organized into neat, understandable groups. For instance, if the "Abdallah Azzam Brigades" were in fact behind last month's resort bombing at Sharm el-Sheik, its surviving members are now on the run. If they manage to evade capture, they may well emerge to strike again, but could do so under a different name. Conversely, the brigades' claim of responsibility could have come from an uninvolved sympathizer. The key question is the overlapping personal relationships of those involved.

It's useful, therefore, to think of Al Qaeda as an ideological force that reaches beyond its organizational structure. While groups like Southeast Asia's Jemaah Islamiyah (Islamic Group) and the pan-Islamic Hizb ut-Tahrir (Party of Liberation) have some doctrinal differences with Al Qaeda, they have overlapping interests.

Are the goals of jihadists changing?

Not much, experts say. The targets and tactics may be influenced by current circumstances - such as the US presence in Iraq - but an unchanging worldview underlies it all: The jihadists see Muslims as locked in a life-or-death struggle with a West that hates Islam. While the goal of an Islamic superstate remains central, the impetus for jihad can shift. Ideologues motivate adherents by citing specific cases of perceived injustice. The Southeast Asian militants behind a deadly October 2002 attack in Bali wanted to undermine the Indonesian state in order to create an Islamic caliphate there. They also subscribed to the broader vision of an eventual caliphate running the whole globe.

What's Al Qaeda's view of democracy movements in muslim countries?

Al Qaeda is against democracy as most in the West would understand it. What it wants is the replacement of existing authoritarian regimes with religious states. These would impose a rigid view of the Koran on citizens. In Al Qaeda's view, Western democratic ideas stand in the way of God's will on earth. Al Qaeda ideologue Ayman al-Zawahiri and Abu Musab al-Zarqawi - the self-proclaimed mastermind of Al Qaeda in Iraq - have attacked democracy as a "trick" to deny Muslims the full flowering of Islam.

In his most recent videotaped statement on June 17, Zawahiri lashed out at Egypt's democracy protestors for playing an American game. It was an attack on the nation's secular democracy and reform movements such as Kifaya. Analysts also saw it as a thrust at Islamist groups like Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood, which favors Islamic law and says it is committed to democratic institutions. To Zawahiri, such groups can only thwart the utopian vision of a vast Islamic state. If the U.S. left the Middle East, would militants focus their attacks on Shiites?
Ah, the civil war equation, already happening IMHO too.

The Islamist extremists whose rage the world is feeling today are primarily Sunni Muslims. In Iraq, which was ruled and dominated by a Sunni minority since the British created the country in the early 20th century, Sunni extremists are already targeting the ruling Shiite majority. Those extremists see the Shiites as impure and have no compunction about targeting Shiite civilians. For some scholars of Islam, the US, in replacing a Sunni regime with a Shiite-dominated one, faces unforeseen challenges as the shift in power is worked out. Some see wider dangers as its neighbors jockey for influence: What happens if turmoil in the new Iraq leads to an open confrontation between a Shiite-dominated Iran and the Sunni-ruled Saudi Arabia?

Experts also see trouble for the US if its eventual withdrawal from Iraq opens the door to a Shiite-led cleansing of Sunni Muslims - the much-discussed "civil war" that some Iraqis, including former Prime Minister Iyad Allawi, say has already began.
I concur, and point to American journalist Vincent's murder as evidence that Shiite's are hard at work eliminating all opposition to this movement towards a Shiite dominated Iraq South of Kirkuk

"It could be very dangerous if the US pulled out entirely," says Martha Crenshaw, a terrorism expert at Wesleyan University in Connecticut. "The jihadists would say that is what the US wanted all along, the extermination of the Sunnis in Iraq.... It could mean huge new problems for the US."
Huge problems like Saudi Arabia being rolled over y Iran? While an attractive prospect in many ways, this might not be so good for our energy needs. Oh what a tangled web.

Is a backlash against jihadism building from within Islam?

Contrary to the complaints of critics, mainstream Muslim clerics have taken steps to combat terrorism. American Muslim leaders have quickly condemned attacks, and have established programs, notably with the FBI, to assist in rooting out extremism.

Such commitments have been amplified since the London bombings. Last week, Muslim scholars in the US and Canada issued a fatwa, or judicial ruling, condemning terrorism and declaring violence against civilians - including suicide bombings - impermissible in Islam. Islamic scholars in Britain have taken similar steps. However, many experts worry that this focus on mainstream clerics is missing the mark, since the radicalized young often do not listen to religious leaders they see as Westernized.

At the same time, debate grows about whether more needs to be done. Some experts argue that jihadist violence can be ended only through opposition from within Islam. So far, such opposition hasn't stopped attacks.

The reason, some argue, is a chicken-and-egg scenario: The climate within Islam might change if Western policy changes. The establishment of a Palestinian state and the departure of US troops from Iraq could leave extremists with fewer arguments that resonate with Muslims.

Thus, both Islam and the West face pressure to change their ways. But both sides confront risks of appearing weak in the process. An apparent retreat by the US and its allies could embolden jihadists.
(Notice jihadists is interchangable with targets here.)
Similarly, mainstream Islamic clerics could lose credibility if a fatwa appears to have come in response to Western demands.

As I promised, less comments, decent article.
Link


Africa: North
Group claims Sharm al-Shaikh blasts
2005-07-23
A group citing ties to al-Qaida says it carried out the Sharm al-Shaikh bombings that have so far killed at least 62 83 people. The posting on a website came just hours after the series of deadly blasts in the Red Sea resort. The group, calling itself the Abdallah Azzam Brigades, al-Qaeda in Syria and Egypt, said that its "holy warriors targeted the Ghazala Gardens Hotel and the Old Market in Sharm al-Shaikh". The authenticity of the statement could not be verified.

The group is one of two that claimed responsibility for the 7 October bombings in the Sinai Peninsula at Taba and Ras Shitan that killed 34 people. "Your brothers, the holy warriors of the martyr Abd Allah Azzam Brigades succeeded in launching a smashing attack on the Crusaders, Zionists and the renegade Egyptian regime in Sharm al-Shaikh," the statement read. "We reaffirm that this operation was in response to the crimes committed by the forces of international evil, which are spilling the blood of Muslims in Iraq, Afghanistan and Chechnya. We declare it loud and clear that we will not be frightened by the whips of the Egyptian torturers and we will not tolerate violation of our brothers' land of Sinai," the statement added in an apparent reference to tourists who travel from neighbouring Israel to Sinai Peninsula for holidays.

The Abd Allah Azzam Brigades are apparently named after Abd Allah Azzam, a Palestinian who led Islamic fighters in Afghanistan and was killed in 1989 by a roadside bomb, and was regarded as the one-time spiritual mentor of al-Qaida chief Osama bin Laden.
Yeah. Zawahiri had him bumped off, I believe. But it was just business.
Link



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