India-Pakistan |
Foreign militants |
2010-10-08 |
[Dawn] American drones rain down missiles in record numbers in North Wazoo Agency, the stamping ground of the Haqqani network, Al Qaeda and sundry foreign snuffys. The US issues a travel advisory to its citizens travelling to Europe, urging them to be cautious in public places because of the possibility of an attack by Al Qaeda. On Monday, eight snuffys, including several 'Germans', are allegedly killed in a drone strike in Mirali, North Wazoo Agency. Do the dots connect cleanly or is this just another series of data points that can be connected in myriad ways? To be sure, a US travel advisory concerning Europe is rather unusual. Europe is not Pakistain or some place the average American travels to infrequently. Then again, The Wall Street Journal had this to offer on Monday: "Several intelligence officials have privately challenged the quality of the US information, describing the US alert as an overreaction. One intelligence official said the decisions to issue the alerts were based in part on the bureaucratic need to 'be on record with an alert to the threat' rather than a belief that a threat is imminent." What is clear is that Fata generally and North Wazoo in particular continue to play host to foreign snuffys. The most well-known and numerous group consists of the Uzbeks, who attracted the ire of the Pak state because of their desire to attack it. Other, western and European, nationalities are also believed to be operating here from Turks to Germans. They do not consist just of men of Pak or Arab or other Mohammedan origin, but also of converts to Islam. The German Eric Breininger, who died earlier this year, and the American Adam Gadahn, Al Qaeda's 'spokesperson' and media manager, are two of the most famous converts believed to have made their way to Fata. Al Qaeda, which fights against both the Pak state and western nations, is also believed to be active in the agency. Here foreign cut-throats are not limited to a few areas or the Haqqani network-controlled swathes of territory, they are believed to have fanned out across the agency, including Mirali, where the Germans were alleged to have been killed. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the Pak state appears to have few ideas about how to tackle the menace of foreign snuffys. Enforcing a uniform, zero-tolerance policy towards foreign cut-throats in Fata is difficult because local commanders and groups often make use of the services of foreigners and offer them protection in return. But doing nothing is not an option: a strike in the West traced back to Pak territory could have devastating consequences for us. |
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India-Pakistan |
Al Qaeda commander killed in US strike in North Waziristan |
2010-06-20 |
A US airstrike in Pakistan's Taliban-controlled tribal agency of North Waziristan killed an al Qaeda commander and a dozen members of the Islamic Jihad Group. Abu Ahmed was among 16 people killed in the US strike earlier today in the town of Inzarabad near Mir Ali, according to Geo News. Ahmed was an al Qaeda military commander who led fighters against NATO and Afghan forces across the border in Afghanistan, a US intelligence official told The Long War Journal. The majority of the 12 Islamic Jihad Group fighters killed are said to be from Turkey. In the four airstrikes against insurgents in North Waziristan that have taken place since June 10, the US has killed three mid-level al Qaeda military commanders. A June 10 strike in the town of Norak in North Waziristan killed Sheikh Ihsanullah, an "Arab al Qaeda military commander," and Ibrahim, the commander of the Fursan-i-Mohammed Group. A Turkish foreign fighter was also killed in the attack. The deaths of Ihsanullah and Ibrahim were announced by the Taifatul Mansura Group, or the Victorious Sect, a transnational Turkish jihadist group that operates along the Afghan-Pakistani border. The 12 insurgents killed today alongside the al Qaeda commander were from the Islamic Jihad Group (or Islamic Jihad Union), a splinter faction of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan. The Islamic Jihad Group is based out of the Mir Ali region and maintains close ties with al Qaeda leader Abu Kasha al Iraqi and North Waziristan Taliban commander Hafiz Gul Bahadar. It is a Specially Designated Global Terrorist organization. German and Turkish Muslims make up a significant portion of the Islamic Jihad Group. Its fighters are often referred to as German Taliban, and they carry out attacks in both Afghanistan and Pakistan. Last year, the Islamic Jihad Group released video of 'German Taliban villages' in Waziristan. Its fighters were seen training at camps and conducting military operations. German members of the Islamic Jihad Group have also been killed in combat inside Pakistan. Eric Breininger, a German man who converted to Islam, was killed while assaulting a Pakistani military outpost in North Waziristan on April 28. Three Uzbek fighters were also killed in the attack. Breininger was wanted for plotting attacks against US military bases and personnel in Germany. Americans have also joined the Islamic Jihad Group. Over the past year, two American jihadists, Abu Ibrahim al Amriki and Sayfullah al Amriki, have been featured in propaganda released by the Islamic Jihad Group. The Islamic Jihad Group has been the target of several US airstrikes in Pakistan's tribal areas. The US killed Najmuddin Jalolov, the leader of the Islamic Jihad Group, in a Predator airstrike in North Waziristan on Sept. 14, 2009. Read more: http://www.longwarjournal.org/archives/2010/06/al_qaeda_commander_k.php#ixzz0rQbylgLg |
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Europe |
The Dutch Taliban |
2010-05-13 |
Recently growing attention has been given to US citizens who have joined the jihad in Pakistan. But the phenomenon is not limited to Americans. The story of the men from The Hague who turned up as tourists' on the Kenya-Somalia border in July 2009 is well known. Now stories are emerging of Dutch involvement in military action against NATO forces in Afghanistan. The Telegraaf today includes an article on a 21-year-old Dutch-German citizen, Danny R., who has recently been killed in Pakistan. The paper is quoting Der Spiegel, which itself received the information from the German BVD. Danny had chosen the path of radical Islam in Berlin and together with a group from the city travelled to Pakistan last September. So far six known Germans have been killed in fighting in the region, and there has been a lot of attention given to the online exploits of (presumed killed) Eric Breininger / Abdulgaffar El Almani. As the Telegraaf notes, Westerners are ideal not just as reinforcements but as propaganda material for online video clips, proof that the holy war is supported by the very same nationalities as the enemy NATO forces themselves. As yet, no Dutch citizens have appeared, but it may only be a matter of time. The Telegraaf quotes an AIVD source that there are around 15 known Dutch jihadis in the region. Alongside this and the Kenya-Somalia case, there have been two Dutch killed in fighting in Kasmir and the arrest of Wesam al-D by US forces for his involvement in IED operations. In total, several tens of Dutch citizens are involved in jihadi activities in various locations. The chosen route for going abroad appears to be via Morocco, and from their to Somalia, Yemen, Iraq, or Pakistan. Others go to attend a madrassa in Egypt. The concern of the security services is often not just related to what these individuals do in Afghanistan-Pakistan. Following training, they can as Dutch citizens return to the Netherlands, ready to answer the call for further action. However, the AIVD source claims that these Dutch jihadis cannot easily return to the Netherlands because they have been away too long and on return will be immediately arrested or put under permanent surveillance.' This last comment is of course the most interesting, because it suggests an all-knowing intelligence and security service that has already identified the right suspects. It is above all a good confidence-building measure to show that the threat is completely covered and will be dealt with should that be necessary. The recent declarations that the AIVD needs to expand its operations abroad to track developments that may affect Dutch national security is not entirely at odds with this comment, but it does come close. For if the service is already so effective in tracking the main threats, it does raise a question why there is a need to expand its operations. In this context it is interesting to read the AIVD's report for 2009 next to the equivalent report from the Military Intelligence and Security Service, the MIVD. As well as support for Dutch military operations abroad, the MIVD also produces threat analyses and investigates potential threats and the military forces from nations that could form a threat to the security of the Netherlands and the NATO area' (p. 11). In terms of the kind of war that is going on in South Asia, where the distinction between military and civilian forces ranged against NATO is not very clear, and the international range of these forces (from training camp to terrorist) is proven, it looks as if the MIVD already presents itself as the best prepared for tracking these developments. Whereas the AIVD report talks of cooperation with around 180 other services abroad, and close cooperation with around 30 of them, the MIVD report chronicles the activities of the service across all regions of the world, including Yemen and Somalia. In his recent critique of the AIVD's intention to expand its presence abroad, Bob de Graaff commented that competition between services can be useful for keeping each sharp' and services don't always have a monopoly in knowledge.' Of course, the resources of the AIVD outstrip the MIVD. But one does end up wondering where one service might end and the other might begin. |
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Europe |
Another German jihadi in Pakistan believed killed |
2010-05-10 |
Security authorities in Germany believe that another member of a group of German Islamist insurgents in Pakistan has been killed. Officials wonder whether the deaths will be a deterrent for copycats or whether it will inspire others to sign up for jihad. A second homegrown Islamist from Germany appears to have been killed in fighting in Pakistan, SPIEGEL has reported. Danny R., a 21-year-old from Berlin, first traveled to Pakistan via Istanbul on Sept. 2, 2009 together with another Islamist. There, he joined a group of insurgents in the porous border region between Pakistan and Afghanistan that has been a hotbed of Taliban and terrorist activity. German security officials have obtained information suggesting that the man was killed several days ago in Waziristan. The news comes just days after word of the death of Eric Breininger, a German-born convert to Islam who had been wanted by German police on suspicion of belonging to a terrorist cell. Danny R., who would have turned 22 on May 1, was born in Berlin but had Dutch citizenship. He renamed himself "Elias" after his conversion to Islam and belonged to a group of radical Muslims in Berlin who claimed they wanted to wage jihad, according to officials. Danny R. had played for a while for the soccer team BFC Alemannia 1890 in the German capital before suddenly disappearing. Authorities are currently investigating whether Danny R. died at the end of April together with Breininger, who was from the western state of Saarland, and a man born in Salzgitter near Hanover named Ahmet M. According to statements made by associates of the men, four jihadists had been traveling in a car near the city of Mir Ali in Pakistan, when they were stopped and then killed during an exchange of gunfire with soldiers. Only a few days later, Breininger's alleged memoirs were posted on the Internet. In them, he describes his conversion and his transformation into a fervent Islamist. German security officials believe the work to be authentic and are now monitoring the impact of the latest developments on the Islamist scene in Germany. Will the deaths dissuade other German converts considering making the journey to Pakistan? Or will the war reports merely serve to attract other volunteers fascinated by the stories? In Berlin alone last September, in addition to Danny R. and his wife, two other young couples made their way to Waziristan. And in recent years, at least six militant Islamists from Germany are known to have died in the Hindu Kush mountains of Pakistan and Afghanistan. |
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India-Pakistan |
German jihadist killed in NWA |
2010-05-04 |
LAHORE/BERLIN: German officials on Monday said a suspected terrorist linked to a group convicted of plotting attacks on US facilities in Germany appears to have been killed in North Waziristan. Germany's main domestic intelligence agency said a statement issued by the Islamic Jihad Union informing of the death of 22-year-old Eric Breininger on April 30 appeared to be authentic. Breininger, a German-born convert to Islam wanted by German police on suspicion of belonging to a terrorist cell, was killed on April 30 in a fight with Pakistani troops, according to an unconfirmed claim by a jihadi group, Spiegel reported. Based on our general knowledge, the contents of the statement appear to be authentic,' AP quoted the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution as saying in a statement. Breininger, 22, was a member of the Islamic Jihad Union and had contacts with the homegrown group of terrorists who plotted to bomb US targets in Germany in 2007. Three of the members of that group, known as the Sauerland cell after the region of western Germany where it was based, were arrested in September 2007 as they were preparing to carry out bombing attacks. They were sentenced to long jail terms in March this year. A Turkish extremist known as Salaheddin', who was in charge of the Islamic Jihad Union's Internet site, is also reported to have been killed in the fight. German authorities believe Salaheddin is Ahmet M, who was born in Germany and deported to Turkey 10 years ago, the report said. German authorities said they were checking the report. The written statement made by the group called Taifatul Mansura and seen by Spiegel Online says the two men were attacked by Pakistanis who have deserted their faith' near the town of Mir Ali. It is likely to be referring to Pakistani soldiers. Ahmet M had killed four attackers by exploding a hand grenade even though he had already been severely wounded, the statement said. Breininger was believed to have been in the North Waziristan since September 2007. He had appeared in several propaganda videos posted by the IJU in recent years and had tried to recruit new members in Germany. If his death is confirmed he will be the fourth German-born jihadist to have died in the Pakistan-Afghanistan border region. Taifatul Mansura is a mainly Turkish group which operates under the command of the Afghan Taliban and is closely linked to the IJU. Its statement says: We, those responsible for the region Germany, regard it as important to mention that the jihad is getting increasing numbers of supporters from Europe, especially from Germany.' German authorities believe several dozen German-born jihadists are currently in Afghanistan and Waziristan. |
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Europe |
German Islamist said killed in Pakistan |
2010-05-03 |
![]() According to news magazine Der Spiegel, the Uzbekistan-based terrorist group the Islamic Jihad Union has issued a statement announcing that Breininger and the group's webmaster were killed on April 30. German intelligence sources believe the webmaster may be a Lower Saxony-born man called Ahmet M. who was deported to Turkey seven years ago. Breininger, a Saarland native and member of IJU, had repeatedly appeared on terrorist videos calling for holy war against Germany. He is also suspected of having ties with the Sauerland cell terrorists sentenced in March for poltting to attack US diplomats, soldiers and civilians. The statement sent to the magazine said the two were killed near the city of Mir Ali, but Ahmet M. was allegedly able to kill four soldiers with a grenade despite his severe injuries' before he died. If the deaths are confirmed, Breininger, who changed his name to Abdulgaffar Almani, would be the fourth German Islamist to be killed in the region. |
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Europe |
Security officials warn of terror strikes ahead of German poll |
2009-06-06 |
![]() The report said the assessment was based on a new warning by the US government that the al-Qaida leadership in the dangerous Afghanistan-Pakistan border area had taken a decision to target Germans. The operation is to be carried out by the North African arm of the terrorist group, the al-Qaida in the Maghreb. Citing the German Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BfV) and the Federal Police Agency (BKA), the report said German companies in Algerian and German nationals in North Africa are particularly at risk. Der Spiegel said the BfV had begun to warn German companies, who have branches in the Maghreb, of possible terrorist strikes. They are also reportedly alerting German businessmen to the risk of kidnappings by al-Qaida activists. The report pointed to the case of a Darmstadt-based German woman who was held hostage in North Africa for several months and released in April after the government in Mali said it was prepared to release a prisoner affiliated to al-Qaida. Germany has seen a spate of videos and warnings in recent months, criticizing the governments involvement in Afghanistan. On Friday, a new video by German Islamist Eric Breininger turned up on the Internet, threatening to fight infidels in Afghanistan. In early 2008, Germanys BKA announced that Eric Breininger along with Houssain al-M., both from Neunkirchen in the German state of Saarland, had travelled to Afghanistan at the end of 2007, where they are thought to have prepared for a suicide bombing there. Both are suspected of having ties to suspected terrorists arrested in the Sauerland region in the German state of North Rhine-Westphalia in 2007 that belonged to a group known as the Islamic Jihad Union. |
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Europe |
German Islamist resurfaces by video from Afghanistan |
2008-10-22 |
German officials have been looking for the young man for months. It is a search that has spanned the globe, but which had largely been fruitless. Until Tuesday that is, when Eric Breininger, a young German man from the western state of Saarland, popped up in an Islamic Jihad Union (IJU) terror video claiming he is currently in Afghanistan. In the video, Breininger -- a 21-year-old convert to Islam who has adopted the nom de guerre Abdulgaffar el Almani -- sounds little like the terrorist German officials suspect he has become. Indeed, in the six-minute-long clip, which was posted on the IJU Web site on Tuesday, he sounds more like a young schoolboy reading his homework out loud in front of the class. The mini-movie is called "A Call from Hindu Kush," and its message is clear: "I am currently in Afghanistan and am not personally planning an attack on the country of Germany," Breininger says into the camera. The statement seems to be a direct response to growing concerns that Breininger was preparing to do just that -- and that such an attack could be imminent. Much of that fear stems from knowledge of the group Breininger has joined. The IJU had close contacts with three terror suspects arrested in the western German region of Sauerland last year. The three, Fritz Gelowicz, Adem Yilmaz and Daniel Schneider, stand accused of trying to build a bomb for at attack in Germany. The IJU was also responsible for a suicide attack in Khost, Afghanistan carried out by Cüneyit C. from Bavaria. The March attack killed four people. It is difficult to determine from the video whether Breininger is indeed in Afghanistan as he claims, though it matches up with conclusions drawn by German authorities as to his whereabouts. Just last month, Germany's Federal Criminal Police Office launched a manhunt for Breininger after indications that he had been spotted in the Balkans and was on his way to Germany. That search was discontinued shortly thereafter. Breininger's video is not unlike others in the genre. He accuses the German government of double standards for promoting democracy in some parts of the world but not standing up for Muslims when they are treated poorly. He says that Germany is a potential target for Islamists because the country's military, the Bundeswehr, is stationed in Uzbekistan and Afghanistan and that pulling soldiers out of those countries would reduce the danger of an attack. He warns that he and his comrades will wage "war against the occupiers" until the countries occupied are "liberated." Any country that is a military ally of the United States, he says, should expect to be attacked. The young German also claims that he has no connection whatsoever to the two men arrested at the end of September at the Cologne-Bonn airport. The pair, both Germans with Somali backgrounds, was taken off a plane by officials on suspicion that they were on their way to terror training camps in Pakistan operated by the IJU. Both, though, were released a short time later for lack of evidence. It is this last statement that indicates the video was produced relatively recently. It includes video images of Breininger, but also a number of static photos of him and other images, apparently intending to illustrate the text he seems to be reading. One photo, for example, includes the entire German cabinet as well as Chancellor Angela Merkel. And in one segment Breininger shows his alleged surroundings and says, "We're here in Afghanistan." He's wearing a white robe and a headscarf and can also be seen firing a machine gun. In his last video, Breininger seemed oddly agitated, and some investigators said at the time they believed he might be on drugs. But he seems lucid in the new video. The authenticity of the video has not yet been officially confirmed. Still, German officials are assuming it is real. The site where it could be found in the past posted videos from suicide bomber Cüneyt C. as well as Breininger's first video messages and an interview with him. At the end of the new video, it states it was produced on "October 10, 2008." The Islamic Jihad Union had its origins as an Uzbeki Islamist organization, but it is believed that in recent years its base of operations has been in the Afghan-Pakistan border region. Most experts are certain that the IJU works together with the Taliban, and it is suspected that it also has ties to al-Qaida. Experts estimate the group includes a few hundred fighters. And although there is a dearth of information about the IJU, most experts believe the group has an ideology largely similar to al-Qaida's. Its activities are also clearly focused on the Central Asia region. The last time German officials had reliable information about Breininger's whereabouts was in March 2008, when he was in Peshawar, Pakistan. They lost track of him there. Most analysts believe he is in Waziristan, a region on the porous Afghan-Pakistan border where IJU and a number of other militant groups operate camps and where other foreign fighters are believed to be based. In Afghanistan, Breininger is featured on NATO's wanted persons list, and his photo has been posted at all the bases that host NATO troops across the country. Breininger's last video surfaced in April. In it, among other things, he praised Cüneyt C. for his suicide attack and called on German Islamists to follow his example and join the battle. In the new video, though, Breininger doesn't do either. |
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Europe |
Germany's Taliban Trail: From Murat Kurnaz to Cüneyt Ciftci |
2008-05-15 |
John Rosenthal | Bio | 14 May 2008 World Politics Review Exclusive ![]() And what did the American public learn about all this from American news organizations? A Factiva database search turns up a single sparse 280 word AP dispatch tentatively noting that German authorities were "checking" whether the German-born Ciftci might possibly be "linked" to the bombing. Instead, Americans were left to glean whatever more substantial information they could from the English-language website of the German weekly Der Spiegel. While Der Spiegel's March 15 article likewise studiously avoided treating Ciftci's responsibility for the attack as given, it nonetheless conceded that it was "likely": thus prompting the authors to pronounce Ciftci -- in all probability -- "the first suicide bomber from Germany." In light of the fact that Mohammad Atta and two of the three other pilots in the 9/11 attacks also lived in Germany, and indeed plotted the attacks there, the formula gives serious cause to pause. Der Spiegel dramatically described Ciftci's presumptive involvement as "Berlin's Worst Nightmare": as if the Hamburg Cell's leading role in the 9/11 attacks had not already been an even worse one or as if "Berlin" was suffering from collective amnesia and no longer remembered -- or wanted to remember -- the major German connection to 9/11. A few days later a "martyrdom video" of Cüneyt Ciftci emerged. The video depicts Ciftci's preparations for the attack in meticulous detail and shows him pleasantly waving to the camera before climbing into the explosives-laden pickup. It also includes chilling footage of the attack itself: shot from multiple angles and complete with the cameramen's ecstatic cries of "Allahu Akbar" at the moment of detonation. (The video can be viewed here, where Ciftci is identified by his nom de guerre Sa'ad Abu Furqan.) Following the emergence of the video, Der Spiegel and the rest of the German media largely abandoned their hopeful expressions of doubt about Ciftci's responsibility. "The first perpetrator of a suicide attack from Germany," the weekly Stern now called Ciftci -- displaying the same startling obliviousness to the German role in the 9/11 attacks as Der Spiegel had previously. But when interviewed by ZDF television, Jörg Ziercke, chief of Germany's Federal Bureau of Criminal Investigations (BKA), continued to insist that he could not confirm that Ciftci had been the bomber. "We don't have the corpse," Ziercke said, "We have to undertake an identification of the corpse." As anyone who watches the massive explosion documented in the video will be able to appreciate, there is not likely to be much of Ciftci left to facilitate this identification. In the meanwhile, two new propaganda videos have emerged that depict yet another apparent recruit for the Taliban cause from Germany: the German convert Eric Breininger -- or "Abdulgaffar El Almani," according to his nom de guerre. The videos were posted on the same Turkish website that the IJU earlier used to post the Ciftci video and they bear the same "brand name" logo -- "Badr at-Tawheed" -- as the Ciftci clip. They were presumably shot in the tribal regions of Pakistan where the IJU is known to have its training camps. In one of the clips, "El Almani" -- "the German" -- can be heard calling on his "brothers" in Germany to come join him in jihad. Balance at the link. |
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