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Eye on Extremism
April 28, 2016
Newsweek:
ISIS Covering Streets Of Raqqa To Thwart Drone Strikes
“The Islamic State (ISIS) militant group is covering up the streets of
Raqqa using sheets tied across the tops of shopfronts and residences in a
bid to protect against deadly drone strikes on its fighters, according to
activists and the U.S.-led coalition. The activist group operating inside
the city, Raqqa is Silently Being Slaughtered, shared images on Tuesday
that showed the radical Islamist group’s tactic to limit the U.S.-led
coalition’s visibility of the group’s fighters from above. The group
tweeted: ‘Photo shows how ISIS is covering the streets of Raqqa to
prevent drones from targeting their fighters.’”
Associated
Press: Military Buildup, Fighting Spells End Of Syrian Cease-Fire
“A military buildup in northern Syria, coupled with heavy fighting and
mounting civilian casualties, spells the end of a cease-fire that for two
months brought some relief to a war-weary country. The renewed violence
is ushering in what could be an even more ruinous chapter in the
5-year-old conflict. About 200 civilians have been killed in the past
week, nearly half of them around Aleppo. There has even been shelling in
Damascus, along with a car bomb — both rarities for the capital. With
peace talks in Geneva completely deadlocked, Syrians are regarding the
escalating bloodshed with dread, fearing a return to full war and slow
destruction.”
ARA
News: ISIS Targets Syrian Democratic Forces With Chemical Weapons
“At least 15 fighters from the western-backed Syrian Democratic Forces
(SDF) were wounded on Tuesday in a chemical attack by the radical group
of Islamic State (ISIS) in Syria’s northeastern province of Hasakah,
medical sources reported on Wednesday. The SDF leadership confirmed that
several shells containing chemicals dropped on their positions in the
vicinity of Shaddadi city [60 km south of Hasakah city] northeastern
Syria.”
Daily
Beast: U.S. Kills ISIS Operatives Linked To Europe Attacks
“As the self-proclaimed Islamic State trumpets its global terrorist
campaign, U.S. special operations forces have quietly killed more than
three dozen key ISIS operatives blamed for plotting deadly attacks in
Europe and beyond. Defense officials tell The Daily Beast that U.S.
special operators have killed 40 ‘external operations leaders, planners,
and facilitators’ blamed for instigating, plotting, or funding ISIS’s
attacks from Brussels and Paris to Egypt and Africa. That’s less than
half the overall number of ISIS targets that special operators have taken
off the battlefield, one official explained, including top leaders like
purported ISIS second-in-command Haji Imam, killed in March.”
Fox
News: At Least 14 Doctors Without Borders Staff, Patients Killed In
Aleppo Airstrikes
A wave of nighttime airstrikes hit a hospital in Syria supported by
Doctors Without Borders and nearby buildings in the rebel-held part of
the contested city of Aleppo, killing as many as 27 people, including 14
doctors and patients — among them children and one of the last
pediatricians in war-torn Syria, the international medical aid group
reported. The strikes, blamed on the embattled government in Damascus,
came shortly before midnight Wednesday and hit the well-known al-Quds
field hospital in the rebel-held district of Sukkari in Aleppo, according
to opposition activists and rescue workers. A separate blitz in Aleppo
reportedly killed 20, raising the 24-hour death toll in the key city to
at least 61.”
Times
Of Israel: IDF Commander: Hezbollah Preparing For War, Just Like In 2006
“An IDF battalion commander stationed on Israel’s border with Lebanon
on Wednesday said the Hezbollah terror group’s recent activity was
‘reminiscent of what they did before the Second Lebanon War.’ An IDF
battalion commander stationed on Israel’s border with Lebanon on
Wednesday said the Hezbollah terror group’s recent activity was
‘reminiscent of what they did before the Second Lebanon War.’ In the
summer of 2006, Israel and Hezbollah fought a war in Lebanon that killed
about 160 Israelis, most of them soldiers, and nearly 1,200 Lebanese,
including several hundred Hezbollah fighters, according to the Israeli
army.”
Huffington
Post: New Research Shows ISIS Recruitment Driven By Cultural Isolation
“As the map shows, the Muslim populations most likely to join ISIS are
not in the Middle East or Africa. Rates of ISIS recruitment are highest
in highly developed western countries, the ones with cultures you might
least associate with radical Islam. The finding is consistent with
several other studies that have found overwhelmingly negative views of
ISIS is majority-Muslim countries. At the top of the list is Finland. Of
its Muslim population, which numbers only 42,000, 70 are estimated to
have traveled to Syria or Iraq to join as ISIS fighters.”
Reuters:
Fear Of Boko Haram Deters Displaced In Chad From Going Home: Aid Agencies
“Fear of new Boko Haram attacks in the Lake Chad area is discouraging
around 100,000 people uprooted by violence from heading home and is
hindering aid operations, agencies said on Wednesday, days after Chad
extended its state of emergency. Chad helped force the Islamist group to
cede territory last year, undermining its six-year campaign to carve out
a Nigerian caliphate, but the militants have since ramped up attacks and
suicide bombings in remote border areas around Lake Chad. While a lull in
attacks in recent months has allowed aid agencies to reach most of those
displaced around the lake, the security situation remains volatile and
unpredictable, said the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs (OCHA).”
The
Guardian: Taliban Suicide Bomber Accidentally Triggers Explosives Early,
Killing Himself And Eight Other Would-Be Martyrs At Their Base
“A Taliban suicide bomber accidentally killed himself and eight fellow
militants after triggering his explosives vest by mistake. The jihadist
fighters had been ordered to carry out an attack in Kunduz city,
Afghanistan, but all died before their got there. However, one of the
militants detonated his vest shortly after leaving a Taliban base
in Dasht-e-Archi, triggering everyone elses explosives, the Afghan
Interior Ministry said. The Taliban fighters had been part of a group
operating under commander Mullah Wali, the MoI statement said. The
Taliban have been trying to recapture Kunduz, a city which they held for
just 14 days after months of fighting with government forces.”
Telegraph:
British Jihadist Taunts Security Services With Account Of How He And
Jihadi John Escaped To Syria On UK Passports
“British jihadist has taunted security services with a detailed
account of how he and Isil executioner ‘Jihadi John’ managed to travel
through Europe to Syria on UK passports, despite being on terror
watchlists. Mohammed Emwazi, the Londoner filmed beheading Western
hostages, and the unnamed friend, managed to leave Britain in early 2013
without attracting the attention of authorities. Writing in Islamic State’s
monthly Dar al-Islam magazine, the author says they travelled in a
freight lorry carrying migrants along a popular people-trafficking route
to a Channel port.”
The
Wall Street Journal: Encryption Without Tears
“In an increasingly digital world, strong encryption of devices is
needed to prevent criminal misuse of data. But technological innovation
must not mean placing individuals or companies above the law. Over the
past year the two of us have explored the challenges associated with
criminal and terrorist use of encrypted communications. Two examples
illustrate why the status quo is unacceptable. The first is the Islamic
State-inspired terrorist attack last year in Garland, Texas. FBI Director
Jim Comey said the attackers ‘exchanged 109 messages with an overseas
terrorist’ the morning of the shooting, but the FBI cannot access those
messages to determine the exact role of Islamic State in the shooting and
how to help prevent future attacks.”
United
States
The
Guardian: US To Release Report On Failings Leading To Airstrike On
Afghanistan Hospital
“The Pentagon is due to release a report on an internal investigation
into one of the most infamous episodes of the war in Afghanistan: a
special operations airstrike on a hospital in the north of the country
that left 42 civilians dead. The report provides an official assessment
of the failings that led to a US AC-130 gunship attacking a Kunduz
hospital run by Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), or Doctors Without
Borders, several of whose patients burned to death in their beds. The
organization has called the strike a deliberate act tantamount to a war
crime. Defense sources indicated declassification of the long-awaited
report could come as soon as this week. In the fall, US officials said an
unspecified number of officers involved in the strike had been suspended
from duty.”
The
Washington Post: Israel’s Controversial ‘Roof Knocking’ Tactic Appears In
Iraq. And This Time, It’s The U.S. Doing It.
“‘Roof knocking’ is a controversial Israeli military practice
used in the Gaza Strip. It works on a simple logic designed to
minimize civilian casualties. Occupants of a building are
given a warning a few minutes before a military strike. The
first warning is generally a phone call. The second is a rocket. The
Israeli military has argued that the practice saves lives by
giving occupants a chance to escape, but critics say the tactic creates
confusion and can amount to psychological warfare. This week, the
United States announced that it had used the tactic in Iraq.
U.S. military officials told reporters on Tuesday that roof-knocking had
been carried out during an operation on April 5 in the Iraqi city of
Mosul.”
Syria
Reuters:
Syrian Kurdish Leader Sees Turkish Hand In Border Closure
“The Kurdish government in Iraq has dealt a blow to Kurdish-controlled
areas of northern Syria by keeping the border closed for more than one
month, an economic and political setback for the Syrian region as it
plans for wider autonomy. The Kurdish administration in northeastern
Syria believes it is being targeted by the Kurdish government in Iraq in
coordination with regional power Turkey, which is deeply concerned by
growing Kurdish sway in Syria. The move has laid bare Kurdish divisions
across the frontier that could complicate the Syrian Kurds' political
ambitions: Iraqi Kurds took the step the very week the Syrian Kurds and
their allies announced plans for a new system of autonomous government in
northern Syria.”
BBC:
Syria Conflict: UN Envoy Calls On US And Russia To Save Talks
“The UN envoy to Syria has urged the US and Russia to urgently
intervene ‘at the highest level’ to salvage talks. Speaking after
briefing the UN Security Council on the faltering peace process, Staffan
de Mistura said that a truce agreed in February was ‘barely alive’.
Violence in Syria has intensified in recent days, despite the ceasefire.
At least 20 civilians were reportedly killed on Wednesday in government
strikes on a hospital and nearby residential building in eastern Aleppo.
Civil defence volunteers, known as the White Helmets, told French news
agency AFP that the dead included children and the only paediatrician
left in rebel-held areas of the city.”
Iraq
Reuters:
Iraqi Army Makes Modest Advance South Of Mosul
“Iraqis armed forces backed by U.S.-led coalition air power captured a
village in Nineveh province from Islamic State on Wednesday, the first
advance on the northern front since the offensive was paused three weeks
ago. Mahana, sitting south of a main east-west road, became just the
fourth village seized by the army in the Makhmour area, which is set to
be a staging ground for a future assault on Mosul, about 60 km (40 miles)
further north. The advance brings Iraqi forces slightly closer to the oil
town of Qayyara on the western banks of the Tigris River, control over
which would help to isolate Mosul, the largest city held by the
militants, from territory they control further south and east.”
Reuters:
Kurds, Shi'ites Agree To Withdraw Forces From North Iraq Town After
Clashes
“Senior Kurdish and Shi'ite Muslim leaders agreed on Wednesday to
withdraw their forces from a northern Iraqi town in a bid to end violence
that has killed more than 10 people in recent days. The clashes in Tuz
Khurmato, 175 km (110 miles) north of Baghdad, marked the latest violence
in the town since Islamic State militants were driven back in 2014 by
Kurdish peshmerga and Shi'ite militia, nominal allies against the Sunni
militants. Mayor Shalal Abdul said that under the deal, local police
would take control of Tuz Khurmato - home to Kurds, Shi'ite Turkmen and
Sunni Arabs. A Kurdish official in the town, Kareem Shkur, said the
peshmerga and Shi'ite militias would pull out once the police forces
achieved a balance between the town's various ethnic and sectarian
groups, estimating that would take around one month.”
Turkey
Newsweek:
Is Turkey Poised To Become An Islamic Republic?
“Just a decade ago, the U.S. State Department downplayed concerns
about the direction then-Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan was taking
Turkey by arguing that fears he had an Islamist agenda were misplaced.
Assistant Secretary of State Daniel Fried, for example, described
Erdoğan’s ruling Justice and Development Party as really no
different than a European-style Christian Democratic Party—that is,
religious in name only but really respecting traditional notions of
laicism and progressivism. Now it seems that Erdoğan is going one step
further. He has made no secret of his desire to redraft a constitution,
one that creates a strong presidency to legalize the powers he has
already assumed. That constitution, yet to be drafted, is nonetheless
beginning to take shape in leaks and comments.”
The
New York Times: Suicide Bombing Near Historic Mosque In Turkey Wounds 13
“A female suicide bomber blew herself up near a historic mosque in the
northwestern Turkish city of Bursa on Wednesday, wounding at least 13
people, officials said. The explosion rocked the 14th-century Ulu Camii,
or Grand Mosque, a popular tourist destination in a historic district of
the city. Television reports showed shattered glass and debris from shops
and restaurants close to the mosque. The police cordoned off the area as
ambulances sped to the scene. The Turkish health minister, Mehmet
Muezzinoglu, said in a statement that none of the 13 people who were
hospitalized were in critical condition. The attack took place a few
hours after the United States Embassy in Ankara issued a security
advisory to American citizens, warning of credible threats against
tourist destinations throughout Turkey.”
Egypt
Associated
Press: Egypt Official Says Sinai Bombing Kills 3 Police, Wounds 8
“Egypt's state news agency says three policemen have been killed in a
roadside bombing in the turbulent north of the Sinai Peninsula. MENA
quoted an unidentified security official saying that the Wednesday
explosion targeted an armored personnel carrier in the city of el-Arish,
wounding another 8 policemen. The official says the wounded were taken to
the military hospital in el-Arish. There was no immediate claim of
responsibility for the latest attack. A local affiliate of the Islamic
State group has claimed responsibility for a series of attacks on
security forces in Sinai since 2014.”
Middle
East
Reuters:
Israeli Forces Kill Palestinian Woman And Brother, Armed With Knives:
Police
“Israeli police shot dead a Palestinian woman and her teenage brother
on Wednesday, saying they were armed with knives and tried to carry out
an attack at a checkpoint in the occupied West Bank. Police said the
woman, holding a knife, and a man walked rapidly towards police and other
Israeli security guards in a vehicles-only lane at the Qalandia
checkpoint outside Jerusalem. ‘Police called on them several times to stop.
When they kept advancing...the officers neutralized the terrorists,’ a
police statement said. Palestinian authorities identified the two dead as
Maram Abu Ismail, 23, and her 16-year-old brother, Ibrahim Taha, and said
they had been en route to Jerusalem for a medical appointment.”
Nigeria
ABC
News: Nigeria's Stolen Girls: Inside Boko Haram Territory Where Children
Are Forced To Become Suicide Bombers: Reporter's Notebook
“Last year, Boko Haram pledged allegiance to ISIS – renaming
themselves Islamic State West Africa -- stepping up slick propaganda and
gruesome attacks. In the years since First Lady Michelle Obama and
countless celebrities and normal folk held up #BringBackOurGirls signs,
the U.S. has sent hundreds of special forces in advisory roles to the
region. They also set up a surveillance drone base in Cameroon sharing
intelligence with the African military units. But American soldiers
aren’t the ones going into the Sambisa forest hunting down Boko Haram
encampments. The Nigerian military has won a lot of territory against
Boko Haram since they elected a new president last year.”
United
Kingdom
Mirror:
Police Arrest 21-Year-Old Man 'Who Was Planning To Travel To Syria' On
Suspicion Of Terrorism
“A man has been arrested on suspicion of terrorism as police
investigate allegations he was planning to travel to Syria. The
21-year-old is accused of being involved in the commission, preparation
and instigation of terrorism. He was arrested by officers from the
Met Police Counter Terrorism Command, assisted by officers from the
Eastern Counter Terrorism Intelligence Unit at around 1pm today. The
suspect, who is from Luton, Bedfordshire, was taken to a police station
in south London for questioning. Officers are investigating alleged
plans to travel to Syria to support a banned organisation, Scotland Yard
said.”
ABC
News: UK Targets ISIS Bunker With Royal Air Force’s Largest Bombs
“The United Kingdom's Royal Air Force (RAF) has ramped up its bombing
campaign against ISIS. Enhanced Paveway III (EPW III) bombs, the largest
in RAF's arsenal, successfully hit two entrances to an underground bunker
as part of the coalition's efforts to combat ISIS. The strikes, which
occurred on April 21, targeted a large complex of tunnels and bunkers in
the terraced hillsides above the Euphrates in western Iraq, according to
a press release from the Ministry of Defense. There were no civilian
casualties, a spokesperson for the Ministry of Defense confirmed to ABC
News. Typically these ‘bunker buster’ bombs are used to strike
underground targets that have been reinforced to protect from aerial
bombardment.”
Germany
Sputnik
News: Fears Of Terrorist Nuke Attack Grow After Power Plant Hacked In
Germany
“A German nuclear power plant found its network implanted with viruses
which could allow remote access to equipment for moving nuclear fuel
rods. The major security breach occurred at the Gundremmingen
nuclear power plant, 75 miles northwest of Munich,
after malware was found on 18 removable data drives. The W32.
Ramnit and Conficker viruses were discovered on the drives —
malware which could be used to obtain sensitive nuclear fuel data.
W32.Ramnit allows hackers access to files and, potentially, physical
control over systems; terrorists could access the information and
use it to build a radioactive ‘dirty' bomb. According
to officials, the plant is isolated from the Internet, and,
as such, no online theft could occur.”
France
CNN:
Terror Suspect Abdeslam Appears In French Court After Extradition
“Terror suspect Salah Abdeslam appeared in a Paris courtroom Wednesday
but declined to address the charges against him, saying he was exhausted
due to his transfer from Belgium earlier in the day. After Belgium turned
the 26-year-old suspect over to French authorities early Wednesday, elite
French military police flew him to France. He was then handed over to
authorities and taken to the Palais de Justice in central Paris to appear
before the investigating magistrate, CNN's French affiliate BFM-TV
reported. His next hearing has been set for May 20, according to his
French attorney, Frank Berton.”
Europe
Telegraph:
One In Three Jihadists Now Women, Warns Police Chief
“One in three jihadists leaving the UK and other nations for Syria are
now women because they are being trained to fight on the frontline for
the first time, the head of Europol has warned. Rob Wainwright, director
of Europe’s policing agency, said an ‘increasing number’ of women are
being radicalised by Islamic State in Iraq and Levant (Isil) but they are
no longer just becoming ‘jihadi brides’. There is evidence of women being
trained in combat and Mr Wainwright warned that could be one of the
reasons why numbers are going up.”
Newsweek:
How ISIS Smuggles Terrorists Among Syrian Refugees
“Last weekend, The Washington Post reported for the first
time on exactly how ISIS was able to infiltrate operatives into
Europe, hiding them among the flood of refugees, so they could carry out
deadly terrorist attacks. In addition to interviews with intelligence
officials, the Post was able to interview an ISIS commander who
boasted about how the worst is yet to come. It is true that the vast
majority of refugees are good and decent people who are fleeing the
carnage wrought by the Islamic State militant group. They are not
advocates of Islamic radicalism; they are the victims of Islamic
radicalism. The danger is not coming from them, but from Islamic radicals
who are using them as cover to infiltrate operatives into the West.”
Technology
The
Wall Street Journal: FBI Decides Against Taking Steps To Tell Apple About
iPhone-Hacking Method
“The Federal Bureau of Investigation announced Wednesday it wouldn't
consider telling Apple Inc. how the agency was able to unlock a
terrorist’s iPhone. The decision brings to an abrupt end an internal
government debate about how much to tell Apple about a newly discovered
security vulnerability in one iPhone model. The FBI decision not to
initiate a broad governmental discussion called the Vulnerabilities
Equities Process—in which a number of agencies explore whether to
disclose software vulnerabilities to the affected companies—means Apple
will likely be kept in the dark about exactly how the government was able
to crack the model 5c iPhone used by Syed Rizwan Farook, who along with
his wife killed 14 people in San Bernardino, Calif., in December.”
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