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Mohammed the Egyptian Mohammed the Egyptian al-Qaeda in Europe Europe 20040609 Link
  Mohammed the Egyptian Islamic Moroccan Combatant Group Europe 20051002 Link

Europe
Spain's Supreme Court Clears 4 in Madrid Train Bombing Case
2008-07-18
Spain's supreme court has overturned the convictions of four of the 21 people found guilty of involvement in the 2004 Madrid train bombings that killed 191 people. The four men had been convicted of charges ranging from membership of a terrorist group to supplying explosives.

The court also upheld a lower court's acquittal of one of the alleged masterminds of the al-Qaida inspired attacks, Rabei Ousmane Sayed Ahmed, also known as Mohammed the Egyptian. The Supreme court said Thursday there was not enough evidence to condemn him as an organizer of the attack.
"Yeah. Da witnesses is all dead!"
The early morning bombing of four packed commuter trains was the deadliest terror attack in the west since the September 11 attacks in the US in 2001.
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Europe
Suspects get 40,000 years for Madrid train bombings.
2007-11-01
Doesn't matter, they won't serve more than ten years each ...
(AKI) - Three out of eight top suspects in the 2004 Madrid train bombings were on Wednesday given maximum jail terms of thousands of years in prison for their role in the coordinated attacks on the Madrid commuter trains that killed 191 people and injured nearly 2,000.

A total of 21 out of 28 people on trial were found guilty of involvement in the 11 March 2004 bombings. "Today, justice has been done," said Spain's prime minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero, commenting the sentences.

Seven of the 28 defendants were acquitted, including the main suspect and alleged bombing mastermind Rabei Osman Sayed Ahmed, also known as "Mohammed the Egyptian". Ahmed was extradited to Spain from Italy in 2004 and has been sentenced by an Italian court to eight years in jail for links to Muslim militant groups in Europe.

Jamal Zougam, one of the leaders of the Islamist cell who was accused of planting the bombs, was sentenced to 30 years for each of the 191 victims and 20 years for each of the injured, and 12 years for belonging to a terrorist cell. Under Spanish law, he can only serve a maximum of 40 years in prison.

Spaniard Emilio Suarez Trashorras, who was found guilty of supplying the bombers with dynamite, also received a sentence of over 35,000 years in jail.

Judge Javier Gomez Bermudez ruled out the Basque separatist group ETA's involvement in the deadly bombings. The attacks caused a political earthquake in Spanish politics as voters resoundingly rejected a conservative Spanish government in parliamentary polls that took place three days after the bombings.

Shortly after its election to office, Zapatero's new Socialist government pulled out Spain's troops from Iraq. The ruling centre-right Partido Popular (PP) had wrongly blamed the Islamist attack on ETA, despite mounting evidence that Islamists were responsible.

Rafa Zouhier, a Moroccan national was sentenced to 10 years in jail for putting the bombers in touch with Trashorras to obtain the explosives used in the attack. Another Moroccan national, Otman el-Ganoui, also convicted of playing a role in obtaining explosives for the attack, was sentenced to 30 years for each of the 191 victims and 20 years for each of the injured. He also got a 12 year sentence for belonging to a terrorist cell.

Spaniards Carmen Toro, Antonio Toro, Emilio Llano, Javier Gonzalez Diaz, Ivan Granados and the Moussaten brothers were acquitted of all charges. Of the nine Spanish suspects, one woman was charged and convicted with supplying stolen dynamite used in the attacks.

The judge announced compensation for victims of the attacks ranging from 30 thousand euros per victim to 1.5 million euros.The victims were divided by 'groups' depending on the severity of their injuries. The jury reached their verdicts with "total unanimity," Bermudez said. All the suspects pleaded innocent and those found guilty are expected to appeal against their sentences. The verdict had been scheduled for 11:00 am, but was delayed due to protests by victims of the bombings, who wanted to be present in the courtroom. A total 25 journalists were removed from the public gallery in order to fit in 25 victims of the attacks in the courtroom.
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Europe
Madrid Bombing Defendants Start Hunger Strike
2007-05-11
(AKI) - In a surprise move, some of the main defendants in the maxi-trial for the 2004 Madrid train bombings began a hunger strike on Thursday. According to various Spanish websites Youssef Belhadj, Hassan el Haski, Rabei Osman el Sayed (known as Mohammed the Egyptian, arrested in Italy in June 2004) and Abdeljamid Bouchard announced their decision in letters sent to the prison authorities. The first three are considered the "brains" behind the 11 March, 2004 attack in which 191 people were killed. The prosecution says the fourth, Abdeljamid Bouchard, was one of those who physically carried out the bombings.

The hunger strikers argue that the accusations against them are unjust and during Thursday's hearing some defendants managed to show two protest placards to the television cameras. They say their situation is unbearable.
I have a potential solution ...
The strike acquires additional weight in Spain because it comes after a controversy that has far from died down. In March the convicted terrorist of ETA, Iñaki De Juana Chaos was granted house arrest after a 100 day hunger strike. He was transfered from a Madrid hospital to the Basque country for what the Zapatero government referred to as "humanitarian reasons". Several days ago, De Juana Chaos - now completely recovered - was photographed while he was strolling with his girlfriend and the controversy re-exploded amid criticism of the government of being 'soft' on convicted ETA terrorists.
Way to go, Zappy, now that you've made your bed ...
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Europe
Key Suspect Back In The Dock At Madrid Train Bombing Trial
2007-02-24
The high security trial of 29 people suspected of involvement in the deadly March 2004 bombings of commuter trains in the Spanish capital, Madrid, will resume on Monday. A key defendant, the Egyptian Rabei Ousmane Sayed Ahmed will again appear in court after refusing to answer questions from the prosecution last Thursday - the opening day of the trial. He is charged with 191 murders, 1,824 attempted murders and with running a terrorist organisation. He denies the charges and has said he condemns the Madrid train bombings - the worst al-Qaeda inspired terrorist acts on European soil - which killed 191 people and wounded over 1,800.

Ahmed's lawyer asked for the trial to be interrupted last week so that his client could listen once again to phone taps made by Italian police in which Ahmed is allegedly heard saying the 11 March 2004 attacks "was all my idea, and took a lot of patience and preparation." In the phone taps, a voice investigators allege is Ahmed's is heard calling the Madrid bombers "martrys and my brothers."

One of the allleged chief plotters behind the attacks, Ahmed faces some 38,000 years in jail if convicted. He was arrested on 7 June, 2004 in Italy and was extradited to Spain. Police bugged one of the Milan apartments he lived in and his mobile. At another address he had lived at, a note with the words "11-03-04, martyr, explosive,' was found, according to investigators. During the pre-trial investigation, Ahmed, nicknamed "Mohammed the Egyptian," said he did not recognise the voice in the various recorded conversations as his.

Seven Arab key suspects - including Ahmed - each face a sentence of some 40,000 years jail if convicted. Under Spanish law, the maximum term any individual can serve is 40 years, however. Prosecutors have asked for sentences totalling over 270,000 years for the 29 suspects, many of whom are Moroccan.

More than 600 witnesses and 100 forensic experts have been called to give evidence at the trial, which is expected to last five-six months. A source at Spain's High Court described the trial - which has taken three years to prepare - as the most complicated case the country has seen.

The three-judge panel is led by Javier Gomez Bermudez, who also presided over a trial of 24 suspected al-Qaeda members in 2005. Close to 100,000 pages of evidence prepared by the state prosecutor details how the Islamist cell developed in Spain, allegedly financed the plot by selling hashish and ecstasy pills, and how they made contact with former miners in northern Spain to purchase dynamite for the attacks. Nine Spaniards are charged with supplying and delivering explosives to the cell.
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Europe
How Italy went from an al-Qaeda logistics base to a potential target
2005-10-02
Islamic radicals have been present in Italy in large numbers since 1992, shortly after the defeat of the Red Army in Afghanistan.
Just a small private bitch here: it went from being the Red Army to being the Soviet Army in 1948, if I remember correctly.
Like in other European countries, the influx of former mujahideen volunteers from the Arab world had a great impact. Geographically and politically, the center of gravity for the Islamists was North Italy, where thousands of Muslim immigrants live and work. In Milan, the most active are from Egypt and Algeria, whereas Turin, Varese and Cremona are the territory of the Moroccans and the Tunisians. Further south, apart from a few small groupings in Rome, the most significant presence is in Naples, where the Algerians have established their bridgehead. The Palestinians are of less importance, being fewer and generally more wary of extremist doctrines.
Presumably these are the non-intifada Palestinians, who left home to avoid being boomed or shot down in the streets by their brethren...
In the mid-nineties, during the wars in the former Yugoslavia, Milan became the “hotbed” of Islamic extremism for five main reasons: 1) the activism of the Egyptian Imam Anwar Shaban, linked to al-Gamaa al-Islamiya and close to the positions of the blind Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman; 2) the importance of its Viale Jenner mosque, a proselytizing and recruitment center with international connections; 3) its geographical position, allowing easy access to Northern Europe, the Balkans, the U.S. and the Middle East; 4) the presence of numerous Afghan war veterans and North African extremists linked to terrorist movements; and 5) the ease of collecting funds, documents and arms in North Italy for the jihad fronts, especially in Morocco and Chechnya. Shaban, with his many contacts in the Persian Gulf, was instrumental in keeping the rank and file of the Islamic networks in Italy together.
Has Shaban, perhaps, been arrested and executed?
While clearly inspired by the principles of international jihad, his main objective was to bring down the Egyptian regime. His sermons drew in new recruits, many of whom were sent to Bosnia to fight the Serbs, with a smaller number going to Chechnya.
So the Italians, figuring the trouble was being brewed for somebody else's backyard, ignored it...
Viale Jenner formed part of a network that linked up Islamist groups in Austria, Germany, Turkey and the U.S. Milan was often visited by a then little-known character who was to gain notoriety in 2003: Mullah Krekar, head of Ansar al-Islam.
I've come to the conclusion that Mullah Krekar at the moment represents a red herring. Perhaps he was the nominal "head" of Ansar al-Islam, but the real power was probably with Zark from the first. Krekar's way too clownish to be an international criminal mastermind.
In the course of investigations into the first attack on the Twin Towers (February 1993), telephone contacts between Milanese Islamic militants and the cell involved in the attack were uncovered. There were also close links with other prominent international exponents of jihad, including Ayman al-Zawahiri, who faxed over his orders and advice. Shaban gradually increased his involvement in Bosnia and became the emir of the Mujahideen Battalion. When the war ended, many of the volunteers went back to their countries (including Italy) and started forming the first al-Qaeda groups in Europe. The Imam’s career ended dramatically in 1996 when he was killed at a Croatian road block. But his death didn’t signal the end of radicalism in Italy as many of his followers went on to develop networks of their own.
So that's what happened to him. A tip of the hat to the Hrvatis. There should be more such roadblocks.
Investigations by the Italian authorities (the Milan counter-terror unit in particular) since 1995 show the growth of this phenomenon. Operation Sfinge (targeted against the followers of Shaban) brought 35 suspected Islamic militants to trial; operation Ritorno led to the investigation and sentencing of 11 Islamists; operation Fattar led to the sentencing of 10 individuals and 3 acquittals and the Essid operation led to the successful sentencing of 13 individuals.
Which leads only to the question of how many are left. SISMI, I'd wager, has a pretty good estimate, though they might be hazy on the details.
Various radical groups have a presence in either northern or southern Italy. The Armed Islamic Group, the Moroccan Islamic Combatant Group (the draft of a document about the formation of the group was found in Cremona in 1998), the Algerian Islamic Salvation Front, the Egyptian Gamaa, the Egyptian Islamic Jihad and the pan-Islamic (albeit non-violent) Hizb ut-Tahrir all have some form of presence in Italy.
Hizb is ostensibly non-violent. Its members are just as prone to violence as any otheer Islamist group. They merely change turbans before indulging. The concept of non-violence does not always equate to Ghandi.
The extent of the phenomenon is demonstrated by the fact that, despite the police raids, the cells continue to reform—stronger than before—thanks to the activities of “veterans” such as Abdelkader Es-Sayed and Nasr Mustafa, alias Abu Omar. Investigations have proved that Es-Sayed knew about the September 11 attacks before they happened.
I'm starting to think that the only people who didn't know about 9-11 before it happened were G.W. and me. Cheney should have told us...
From 1995 to the present, northern Italy—with its mosques in Viale Jenner and Via Quaranta in Milan—has been an important base for Islamic militants, which have used it for: recruiting mujahideen for Afghanistan, Iraq and Chechnya; recruiting suicide bombers for the Zarqawi network in Iraq; supplying forged documents for international operations; illicit financial activities; illegal immigrant trafficking; and providing a base of support for fugitives.
All the wholesome activities you'd expect of healthy young Moose limbs...
Since the anti-terrorism offensives prompted by 9/11, the extremists have changed their modus operandi. They visit mosques less frequently because of increased surveillance and they also establish small communities in provincial towns that do not have a strong police presence. Moreover, they have developed special and largely secure channels of encrypted communication with their reference contacts and task masters in Saudi Arabia, Pakistan and Iran. The networks are no longer led by charismatic figures like Shaban, but by local leaders who, although considered minor and unimportant, are capable of planning and ordering attacks.
That accounts for the large number of Number Threes we've been seeing...
These local leaders have the military expertise and connections with mid- to high-level operatives in al-Qaeda to successfully plan and execute attacks. For example, in an area north of Milan there is a small but very active group of Pakistani militants with links to London and Lahore. Some of them are veterans of the Afghan war. According to informed sources, the Italian military intelligence service (SISMI) is keeping a very close eye on this network, with suspicion that they are controlled by a rogue agent in Pakistan’s notorious Inter-Services Intelligence Directorate (ISID—better known as the “ISI”).
Interesting idea, though it doesn't stand up to close scrutiny. The rogue agent idea's certainly popped up many times before, but the problem with it is logistics. An agent — we're actually talking about a controller here — needs a certain amount of infrastructure to function. Presumably Mr. Rogue Agent has a job to fill, which takes up a certain amount of his time, unless he's retired, which I suppose he could be, but then he wouldn't have access to the government-paid support network that would help him to be effective. That would mean he's controlling a fairly major operation in Europe in his off hours, a hobbyist, so to speak. Controllers depend on runners to set up their organization and to provide on-site coordination. The cell leaders theoretically know only the runners. Who's paying for the runners' travel? Who's paying for their subsistence? Who's buying the ammunition and dynamite? Once you achieve a certain level in an organization, your immediate concerns cease being so much the details of actual operations, but tracking the budget lines that pay for them. So we're postulating either a "rogue agent" who's running a fairly major European operation in his spare time, serving as a conduit for money flowing from Binny's pocket (or more likely Prince X, back in Soddy Arabia); or a black cell buried deep within ISI, that's riding the Islamic bandwagon while the rest of the agency is dutifully searching out and killing bloodthirsty turbans at home. I'd tend to go with the second hypothesis, myself, with the understanding that if Perv — or the real master of ISI, whoever he may be — decides to make the switch to what they see as the eventual winning side that Mr. Rogue Agent was "have a heart attack" or some similar unfortunate occurrence.
As with the rest of Europe, the Italian intelligence services are concerned about the militants connected to the Islamic Moroccan Combatant Group, which has roots not only in rural areas but also in larger cities such as Milan and Turin. The arrest of Mohammed Rabei in Milan, alias Mohammed the Egyptian, one of the masterminds behind the Madrid bombings, has probably prevented an attack in Italy or in other European countries. After the attacks in Spain, Rabei traveled to Italy to find a safe place and recruit potential terrorists. Furthermore, recent developments have confirmed links between extremists in Italy and the Zarqawi network in Iraq.
It's good to know that Italy isn't quite as safe a haven as the turbans would like it to be. It's bad to know that they think it is. That means the chances of being arrested and jugged or deported aren't as high as they should be.
Also noteworthy are changes in the funding methods and communication channels. Before 9/11 the money came from zakat (alms) and donations from the Persian Gulf States, which were usually routed through Middle Eastern banks. Since 9/11 the funds have been coming in cash, usually brought over by couriers with suitcases full of dollars or from crime: forged documents, drug trafficking and forged residence permits have all been used to generate funds. Moreover, Pakistanis and Somalis run call centers, which give excellent cover for fundraising and “clean” phones. According to investigative sources one militant, involved in clandestine activities, would use 30-40 SIM cards for a single mobile phone. His method was very simple: he would make a first call and pronounce a few words, before changing the SIM card and ringing the number again to communicate a few words in code. The Islamic extremists in Italy have proved themselves to be particularly adept at producing forged documents. Some of the forged passports ended up in the possession of the network involved in the killing of Afghan Northern Alliance leader Ahmad Shah Massoud in September 2001. Others found their way to an organization active in Morocco. And yet others were found to have been sent to al-Qaeda leaders arrested in Malaysia in 2002. The militants have developed the expertise to produce not just Italian passports but also documents of North African countries (Morocco in particular).
What I can't understand, being out of the business for way too long, is why these finds aren't being exploited more fully. It might be that we're not hearing about them, but we were working on the concept of network analysis back in the early 80's: A knows B who knows C, D, and E. With proper analysis — remember, we were still drawing this stuff in diagrams on white boards back then, because we didn't have computers — you can trace those relationships and assign them levels of significance. There are guys who have similar things on the web right now, from open source. With a little programming, Thugburg could be showing the same things. For a not particularly hefty by government standards fee, I'd be glad to set up something a bit more sophisticated for them.

Or maybe there's an office somewhere with the detailed diagrams but no guys setting up roadblocks or paying quiet visits in the dead of night to make terrible things happen to the participants. I suspect it's the latter problem, since the WoT is being viewed as a political, rather than military, operation in Europe.
The lives of cell members in Italy have always been governed by Spartan principles, putting security before all else. In some districts where they have safe houses, they have created “fortress” zones with a trusted network of look-outs. One of these was in the Porta Venezia district of Milan; a member of the cell spending hours in a little Arabic restaurant posing as a customer, the Tunisian barber keeping an eye on a junction, the Algerian seller watching over a possible escape route; they were like sentries with eyes and ears everywhere. They noted the faces of all “suspect” persons: Italian law enforcement agents, but above all spies from Arabic intelligence agencies. The militants display regimented behavior and have regulated and standardized conduct through the production of manuals, one of which was found by the Carabinieri (paramilitary police) in Milan in July 2002, in an apartment used by Islamic militants. Given this impressive presence in Italy, if the order comes for an attack, there are various teams that are ready to act; all of which have people capable of preparing explosive devices, the hideouts, the documents needed for escape and the would-be martyrs.
Perhaps the Italians have their own government hard boys waiting for that to happen. But since Italy's still in Europe, I doubt it. But since the bad guyz are from countries where the authorities actually do things like that, perhaps they're worried the Italians won't play true to type...
Moreover, it is very easy to procure explosives in Italy, the traditional sources of supply being either local (Calabrian mafia) or East European (particularly Albanian) organized crime networks. The going price for a kilo of plastic explosives is about USD 1500, whereas civil-use explosives costs USD 1000 per kilo and a machine gun can be bought for just a few hundred dollars [7]. A Tunisian detainee who agreed to cooperate with the authorities spoke of a cell, active from 2001 to 2002, that had looked into ways of fabricating bombs from substances freely available on the market: the ingredients and the formula were the same as those used in the London bombs. In the attacks, they were to be packed in trucks specially reinforced to carry large quantities of explosives, rucksacks left in station luggage deposits and a police car that was to be stolen, filled with explosives and launched against the Cathedral in Milan. The possible targets considered were the U.S. Embassy in Rome, American Consulates, an international school in Milan and the Police Headquarters. There are essentially two reasons why there have been no attacks in Italy thus far; several plots have been thwarted by police and intelligence action and in certain cases the Islamic extremists have elected to protect their logistics networks. But, as in London, this can change in the space of a few hours.
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Europe
More details on Spain's indictment of 11 Pakistanis
2005-04-15
Spanish authorities have charged 11 Pakistani nationals over suspected links with Al-Qaeda sympathisers who carried out the Madrid train bombings a year ago. One of those charged, Shahzad Ali Gujar, is suspected of having transferred funds to members of Al-Qaeda, including Amjad Farooki, who Pakistani security forces killed last September and who was implicated in the murder of US journalist Daniel Pearl. Farooki is widely believed to have been an Al-Qaeda recruiter. In all, investigators believe Al-Qaeda members in Pakistan received some EUR 800,000 in funds from Spain.

Mohamed Afzaal, believed to have headed the Pakistani cell in question, is suspected of sending money last September to Rabei Ousman Sayed Ahmed, alias ' Mohammed the Egyptian ', who is currently in custody on suspicion of involvement in the train bombings which killed 191 people. Two other suspects, Shahzad Ali Gujar and Adnan Aslam, are thought to have met 'Mohammed the Egyptian' in Brescia, Italy, in May 2003.

Shahzad Ali Gujar is suspected of meeting Othman el Gnaout, another 11 March suspect, three days before Spain's worst ever terrorist attack, while he is additionally suspected of meeting Saed el Harrak, also in Spanish detention, the day after the blasts. The judge overseeing the case says that "a group was constituted in Barcelona with a view to supporting global jihad from Spanish territory [via] the financing of concrete terrorist acts and people recruited to carry them out". The judge considers there is hard evidence to suggest that Mohamed Afzaal travelled to Dubai in early 2004, where Al-Qaeda operatives instructed him to create terrorist cells in Spain, Norway and Denmark to finance the terrorist network's activities. The Pakistanis are further charged with preparing an attack in Barcelona, having been found to be in possession of films and detailed maps of several major buildings in the eastern Spanish metropolis. One of the maps depicted a shopping mall in the city's port area. Spanish authorities named the 11-strong group as: Mohamed Afzaal, Shahzad Ali Gujar, Nasser Ahmad Khan, Masoud Akhtar, Shafqat Ali, Mahmoud Anwar, Adnan Aslam, Farhat Iqbat, Irfan Khan, Zaman Qamar Uz and Mohamed Choudhry Aslam.
Is it possible they rolled up an entire cell?
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Europe
Eleven Pakistanis charged with Spanish terror plot
2005-04-14
Spanish authorities have charged 11 Pakistanis over suspected links with Al Qaeda sympathisers who carried out the Madrid train bombings a year ago, judicial sources said on Wednesday. One of the 11, Shahzad Ali Gujar, is suspected of having transferred funds to members of Al Qaeda, including Amjad Farooqui, who Pakistani security forces killed last September and who was implicated in the murder of US journalist Daniel Pearl. In all, investigators believe Al Qaeda members in Pakistan received some $1 million in funds from Spain. Muhammad Afzaal, believed to have headed the Pakistani cell in question, is suspected of sending money last September to Rabei Usman Sayed Ahmed, alias "Mohammed the Egyptian", who is currently in custody on suspicion of involvement in the train bombings which killed 191 people. Two of the 11, Shahzad Gujar and Adnan Aslam, are thought to have met "Mohammed the Egyptian" in Brescia, Italy, in May 2003.

Shahzad Gujar is suspected of meeting Othman el Gnaout, another March 11 suspect, three days before Spain's worst ever terrorist attack, while he is additionally suspected of meeting Saed el Harrak, also in Spanish detention, the day after the blasts. The judge overseeing the case said that "a group was constituted in Barcelona with a view to supporting global jihad from Spanish territory (via) the financing of concrete terrorist acts and people recruited to carry them out". The judge considered there is hard evidence to suggest that Muhammad Afzaal travelled to Dubai in early 2004 where Al Qaeda operatives instructed him to create terrorist cells in Spain and Norway or Denmark to finance the terrorist network's activities. The Pakistanis are further charged with preparing an attack in Barcelona, having been found to be in possession of films and detailed maps of several major buildings in the eastern Spanish metropolis. One of the maps depicted a shopping mall in the city's port area. Spanish authorities named the 11-strong group as Muhammad Afzaal, Shahzad Gujar, Nasser Ahmad Khan, Masud Akhtar, Shafqat Ali, Mahmud Anwar, Adnan Aslam, Farhat Iqbat, Irfan Khan, Zaman Qamar and Muhammad Chaudhry Aslam.
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Europe
Al Qaeda's New Front...
2005-01-25
In "Al Qaeda's New Front," airing Tuesday, January 25, at 9 P.M. on PBS (check local listings) FRONTLINE, in association with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and The New York Times, investigates the alarming threat radical Salafist jihadists pose to Western Europe and its allies - including the United States.

"It might come as a surprise to many Americans," says correspondent Lowell Bergman, "But the most pressing threat to the United States is not the suspected Al Qaeda cells at home, but rather the cells operating overseas, especially in Western Europe."

Home to an estimated 18 million Muslims, Western Europe has become the new and deadly battleground in the war on terror. That's because disenfranchised Muslims inspired by local radical imams and jihadist Web sitesãare taking up the cause of jihad. And Al Qaeda, once just a loose organization on the continent, has morphed into a powerful ideological movement.

"The threat is before us, not behind us," France's top antiterror judge, Jean-Louis Bruguiere, tells FRONTLINE. "And we are quite concerned....I think that the terrorist threat today is more globalized, more scattered, and more powerful...than it was before September 11."

What's driving the terrorism threat? Many experts in counterterrorism say it's the belief that violence is justified in order to free the Muslim world from corrupt governments and the influence of the United States and Europe. And because it's difficult for jihadists to launch an attack on U.S. cities and institutions, their focus has turned to local targets in Western Europe.

FRONTLINE follows Rabei Osman El Sayed Ahmed, an Egyptian charged with 191 murders in connection with the Madrid attack. Rabei, also known as "Mohammed the Egyptian," is an example of this new generation of jihadi operatives who apparently operate independently of the old Al Qaeda network set up by Osama bin Laden. He is an example of the next generation of Islamist terrorist that Europe must now contend with.
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Europe
Witness identifies Madrid terror suspect
2004-12-15
The Spanish court system continues to connect the dots...
The Madrid bombing suspect known as "Mohammed the Egyptian" was identified in an identification parade as one of the people who frequented the farm house where the bombs used in Spain's worst terrorist attacks were made. The line-up procedure - the results of which were called "very important" by court sources - took place before Rabei Osman El Sayed, the alleged mastermind behind the attacks, began testifying before Judge Juan del Olmo.

El Sayed "may have occupied a pre-eminent position within a top nucleus of the suspects" in the 11 March train bombings in the Spanish capital that killed 191 people, Del Olmo said in a court document released last week. The magistrate said investigations had uncovered "a level of interpersonal relationship" among El Sayed (Mohammed the Egyptian) and Serhane Ben Abdelmajid, Fouad El Morabit, Basel Ghalyoun and Khaled Zeimi Pardo.

Abdelmajid, also known as "The Tunisian," was one of the suspected terrorists who killed themselves in the Madrid suburb of Leganes as police were closing in on them on 3 April. Zeimi Pardo is at large has been arrested, but the other two suspects are in custody.

"During the time he was in Spain, Rabei Osman, a suspected member of the Egyptian Islamic Jihad, a part of the Al Qaeda network, took over the leadership of a group of followers of extremist Islamic ideology, supporters of the Jihad and of Osama bin Laden," the judge added. El Sayed was flown to Spain last week from Milan, where he was arrested last June. The Interior Ministry said El Sayed would be tried in Spain, but then returned to Italy, where a trial on other terrorism charges is pending. Spain's request for El Sayed was based on Italian police phone taps in which he is allegedly heard to say that he planned and organised the Madrid attacks, which also wounded some 1,500 people.
The Milan phone taps, still providing intel and evidence.
According to one of the transcribed conversations included in the brief, El Sayed said: "The attack in Madrid was my project and those who died martyrs are my dearest friends".
With a friend like this, who needs enemies?
Found also on a computer seized from El Sayed were pictures of mobile-phone-activated bombs similar to those used on 11 March.
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Europe
Two "key" suspects for Madrid massacre arrested
2004-12-09
MADRID- A Syrian and an Egyptian suspected of having links with the group that carried out the deadly Madrid train bomb attacks in March have been arrested in Spain, the interior ministry announced. The ministry named the pair as 29-year-old Syrian Adman Waki and Ahmed Ibrahim Kassem, a 28-year-old Egyptian. News reports had earlier mistakenly identified Kassem as being Algerian.
Easy mistake to make, they're both North Africans, right?
According to a report by the Spanish daily El Pais, investigators regard Waki as a key suspect and say he may have used one of the mobile phones also used by Serhane Ben Abdelmajid Fakhet, a Tunisian suspected of having had a key-role in the Madrid bombings.
This is getting as bad as the Cole bombing. Is there anyone in Spain who isn't a "key" suspect?
Fakhet, known as "The Tunisian", and six other members of the group blew themselves up during a police raid in the suburbs of Madrid in April following the attacks, in which 191 people died and 1,900 were wounded in the worst ever terrorist strike on Spain. Waki has been under police surveillance for several months by Spanish secret service agents, according to El Pais. He has allegedly made several trips abroad, notably within Europe, during which he apparently raised funds for an Islamic terrorist network. Working as a mason he was based in Irun, in the north-eastern Basque region of the country, where the arrests were made. Kassem, detained alongside Waki, also lives in the Basque region, El Pais said, without giving further details.
But the Basques were not involved in any way, the Socialists said so.
In a further development this week regarding the 11 March blasts another key suspect, Rabei Ousmane Sayed Ahmed, was Wednesday remanded in custody and sent to a jail on the outskirts of Madrid after Italian officials handed him over Tuesday night. Spain wants to try Ahmed, nicknamed Mohammed the Egyptian, whom Italian authorities arrested on June 8 in Milan, on charges of multiple homicide and possession of explosives. In the first trial relating to the attacks, a Spanish national aged 16 was convicted last month for his involvement in the bombings. Nineteen suspects are now being detained in Spain over the atrocity.
All of them "key".
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Europe
Appeal of Madrid 'mastermind' in Italian courts
2004-12-01
Prosecutors have asked an Italian court to throw out an appeal by a suspect in the deadly train bombings in Madrid against his extradition to Spain for trial. The Court of Cassation was expected to rule later on Wednesday in the case of Rabei Osman Sayed Ahmed, otherwise known as "Mohammed the Egyptian," who was arrested on 8 June in Milan on a Spanish arrest warrant. He is fighting an extradition order made by the northern city's appeal court on 30 July. Madrid believes he is one of the brains behind the synchronised blasts which killed 191 people aboard commuter trains in the Spanish capital and wants to try him on charges of multiple homicide and possession of explosives.
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Europe
Dutch al-Qaeda cell ready to strike
2004-06-10
Osama bin Laden’s terrorist network al-Qaeda has an active cell in the Netherlands which is ready to strike, according to the published transcript of telephone intercepts. It is unclear if the Islamic terrorists referred to in the transcripts plan to attack in the Netherlands or elsewhere in Europe. Newspaper El Pais and Italian daily La Repubblica published partial transcripts of telephone conversations by alleged terrorist ’Mohammed the Egyptian’ who was arrested in Milan on Tuesday. In one of the intercepted telephone conversation, he allegedly told a friend: "You should know one cell was ready in the Netherlands. Later, for various reasons, it fell apart. At the moment there is just one person who is ready. He is nervous, having just come out of prison - but everything in good time." The Dutch security service AIVD had refused to comment on the reports, due to the "operational character" of the information from Spain and Italy, Dutch newspaper De Volkskrant said. Dutch Liberal party parliamentarians Geert Wilders and Ayaan Hirsi Ali have called on the government to comment on the suggestions the Netherlands is a terrorist target.
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