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Eye on Extremism
December 23, 2016
Counter
Extremism Project
MSNBC:
Germany Launches New Raids in Search for Attacker: CEP spokesperson Tara
Maller comments on the ongoing investigation of the Berlin truck attack
New
York Times: Anis Amri, Suspect in Berlin Truck Attack, Is Shot Dead Near
Milan
“Anis Amri, the chief suspect in the deadly terrorist attack on a
Christmas market in Berlin this week, was killed by the police in a
shootout outside Milan around 3 a.m. Friday, ending a brief but intense
manhunt across Europe, Italian officials announced. Stopped in the suburb
of Sesto San Giovanni, north of central Milan, Mr. Amri was asked to show
identification papers, Italian officials said. He pulled out a pistol and
shot the officer who had asked for the papers. A second officer then
opened fire, killing Mr. Amri.”
The
Washington Post: Suspect In Berlin Market Attack Was Radicalized In An
Italian Jail
“He was the man nobody wanted. When Anis Amri washed up on European
shores in a migrant boat in April 2011, he landed on the windswept
Italian island of Lampedusa already a fugitive. Sought in his native
Tunisia for hijacking a van with a gang of thieves, the frustrated
Italians would jail him for arson and violent assault at his migrant
reception center for minors on the isle of Sicily. There, his family
noted, the boy who once drank alcohol — and never went to mosque —
suddenly got religion. He began to pray, asking his family to send him
religious books. The Italian Bureau of Prisons submitted a report to a
government anti-terrorism commission on Amri’s rapid radicalization,
warning that he was embracing dangerous ideas of Islamist extremism and
had threatened Christian inmates, according to an Italian government
official with knowledge of the situation. The dossier was first reported
by ANSA, the Italian news service.”
USA
Today: ISIL Issues Hit List Of U.S. Churches For Holiday Attacks
“The Islamic State is urging its followers to attack U.S. churches and
has published names and addresses of thousands of prospective targets,
according to a report in the news website Vocativ. Messages posted in
Arabic to the group’s ‘Secrets of Jihadis’ social media site called ‘for
bloody celebrations in the Christian New Year.’ The post, under the name
Abu Marya al-Iraqi, said the Islamic State, also known as ISIL, hopes to
tap lone wolf attackers to ‘turn the Christian New Year into a bloody
horror movie,’ Vocativ reports. The series of messages appeared on
Telegram, a messaging app that allows users to send encrypted messages to
one another. The group also uses social media to provide instructions on
constructing and igniting explosives.”
Associated
Press: Virginia Man Charged With Trying To Aid Islamic State Group
“The investigation began six months ago after a Virginia man allegedly
pledged allegiance to Islamic terrorists on Facebook. It ended Wednesday
with his arrest on charges he gave $250 to FBI informants pretending to
buy weapons for the Islamic State group in Iraq, federal prosecutors said
Thursday. Lionel Nelson Williams, 26, of Suffolk, also owned an AK-47
assault rifle and was expressing the desire to carry out his own
‘martyrdom operation’ in the days before his arrest, according to court
documents filed by the U.S. Attorney's Office in eastern Virginia.”
Politico:
Pentagon: Drone Strikes Took Out 28 Al Qaeda Suspects In Yemen
“Signaling the U.S. drone war against Al Qaeda in Yemen is as hot as
ever, the Pentagon on Thursday revealed that U.S. forces killed 28
suspected militants linked to the terrorist group in nine separate
strikes from Sept. 23 to Dec. 13. The U.S. Central Command announced the
strikes shortly before the anniversary of the attempted bombing of a
commercial airliner in 2009 carried out by Al Qaeda in the Arabian
Peninsula, the especially virulent Yemen offshoot of the terrorist group
that committed the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United States.”
The
Times Of Israel: Israel Busts Hamas Cell Planning Suicide Bombings In
Jerusalem, Haifa
“Israeli security agents busted a 20-member Hamas cell that was
plotting suicide bombings and shootings against Israeli citizens in major
Israeli cities, including Jerusalem and Haifa, the Shin Bet disclosed on
Thursday. The internal security agency didn’t specify when the sting took
place, only saying it occurred in recent months, incorporated various IDF
units, and that the Hamas cell was in a state of ‘high readiness to carry
out deadly suicide attacks.’ The Shin Bet said it arrested over 20 Hamas
operatives from across the West Bank, many of whom had previously spent
time in Israeli prisons for terrorism charges. The cell was ‘hierarchical
and organized,’ the Shin Bet said, with various members involved in
different aspects of planning the attacks.”
Reuters:
Australia Makes Arrests Over 'Imminent Threat' Of Christmas Day Attacks
“Australian police said on Friday they had foiled a plot to attack
prominent sites in the city of Melbourne with a series of bombs on
Christmas Day that authorities described as ‘an imminent terrorist event’
inspired by Islamic State. Police laid terrorism charges against one man,
and were expected to charge at least three others, after authorities
conducted overnight raids on homes in the suburbs of Australia's
second-largest city. Six men and a woman, all Australian citizens in their
20s, were arrested during the raids, which were conducted by about 400
police and members of Australia's domestic spy agency.”
BuzzFeed
News: Social Media Reportedly Blocked In Turkey After Horrific
ISIS Video
“Access to Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube has reportedly been blocked
in Turkey. The move comes after a group known as the Aleppo Province of
the Islamic State reportedly posted a video Thursday showing two Turkish
soldiers being burned alive near Aleppo. Some Internet users in Turkey
say they still have access to the social networks, however, and it’s
possible they’re using VPNs as a workaround. Turkey’s government is known
for restricting its citizens’ internet access during times of crisis; it
most recently throttled access to these sites earlier this week, after a
Turkish police officer assassinated Russian Ambassador to Turkey Andrey
Karlov in an art gallery in Ankara, claiming to want revenge for the
Syrian Civil War.”
Newsweek:
Nigerian Army Frees Almost 2,000 Civilians From Boko Haram In A Week
“The Nigerian army freed almost 2,000 civilians from Boko
Haram-controlled areas in the past week, according to the officer
commanding operations against the militant group. Troops rescued 1,880
civilians from enclaves of the militant group in Sambisa Forest,
north-east Nigeria between December 14-21, Major-General Leo Irabor said
at a press conference in the group’s former stronghold of Maiduguri on
Wednesday. The military also arrested 564 suspected members of Boko Haram
during the same period. Boko Haram launched an armed insurgency against
the Nigerian government in Maiduguri in 2009, seeking to establish a
hardline Islamic caliphate in the country’s majority-Muslim north.”
Los
Angeles Times: Malta Says 2 Hijackers Are Threatening To Blow Up Libyan
Plane With 118 Passenger
“Hjackers who claimed to be armed with grenades took control of a
domestic flight in Libya on Friday, threatening to blow up the plane and
forcing the pilot to land in Malta with 118 people aboard, officials
said. The two hijackers identified themselves as supporters of
deposed Libyan strongman Moammar Kadafi, but it was not clear what their
demands were, according to Magda Magri Naudi, mayor of the Maltese city
of Lija. “Unless their requests are met, they will blow up the plane,”
said Naudi, who has been talking with Maltese and Libyan hostage
negotiators. She said the passengers included 83 men, 28 women and a baby.
It was not clear what their nationalities were, she said, or if they were
any injured, because “no one has approached the plane.”
United
States
Reuters:
U.S. Drone Pilots Defend Tactics As Afghans Question Civilian Toll
“They are speaking about the same deadly drone war that the United
States has been waging this year, but talk to the U.S. military and
Afghan civilians and their conclusions about who is targeted are often
starkly different. To the Americans, only enemy combatants were killed by
missiles fired from unmanned aircraft in Afghanistan in 2016. Eyewitness
accounts, however, along with United Nations reports, suggest dozens of
civilians were among the casualties. The certainty expressed by drone
operators often contrasts with the chaos described by witnesses on the
ground.”
Fox
News: US Placed Berlin Terror Suspect On No-Fly List Months Ago, Report
Says
“The Berlin terror suspect who repeatedly slipped through the fingers
of German authorities was reportedly on the U.S. no-fly list months
before Monday's deadly attack. German officials on Thursday continued to
hunt Anis Amri, who is considered armed and dangerous. A fingerprint in
the cab of the truck used in Monday's attack was found on Thursday to
belong to Amri. Amri piqued the interest of U.S. officials after it was
discovered he had researched the construction of explosive devices and
communicated with ISIS leaders on at least one occasion via the group’s
Telegram Messenger, officials told The New York Times.”
ABC
News: Prosecutors: Man Amassed Weapons Cache For Islamic State
“Federal prosecutors say a Detroit man accused of amassing weapons and
buying explosives did so on behalf of the Islamic State and is backed by
a group of supporters in Maryland. The U.S. Attorney's Office made the
claim in a court filing Thursday opposing a defense request to free
Sebastian Gregerson from jail pending trial. The Detroit News reports ( http://detne.ws/2i6ZXAQ ) it's the
first time prosecutors have alleged publicly that the 30-year-old
Gregerson was part of a broader group of Islamic State supporters.”
Syria
The
Wall Street Journal: Syrian Army Says Government Has Full Control Of
Aleppo
“Aleppo returned to full government control for the first time since
2012, the Syrian army said Thursday, a major victory for President Bashar
al-Assad and a crushing blow for the fractious armed opposition. The
Syrian army declared the city had been ‘liberated’ and security restored,
according to state-run SANA news agency. As the last convoy left eastern
Aleppo, meanwhile, the weeklong evacuation of tens of thousands of
civilians and rebels from the final remaining opposition-held areas of
the city drew to a close Thursday night.”
The
New York Times: Turning Point In Syria As Assad Regains All Of Aleppo
“The evacuation of civilians and fighters from the last rebel-held
part of Aleppo concluded on Thursday after long delays because of frigid
weather, putting all of Syria’s industrial capital back in the hands of
President Bashar al-Assad’s forces for the first time since 2012. The
last buses carrying residents from eastern Aleppo left the city late
Thursday night, according to the Syrian state news agency.Tens of
thousands of people have been removed from eastern Aleppo since Dec. 15.
Before the last buses left on Thursday, the Red Cross said that 34,000
people had left the city, including 4,000 fighters who had left in their
own vehicles the previous night.”
Reuters:
Russia Says Syria Ceasefire To Be Discussed At January Talks In
Kazakhstan: Ifax
“Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Gennady Gatilov said on Friday he
expected new Syria peace talks backed by Moscow, Ankara and Tehran to take
place in the middle of January, the Interfax news agency reported. It
cited Gatilov as saying he expected they would focus on discussing what
needs to be done to get a nationwide ceasefire for Syria in place. The
foreign and defense ministers of Russia, Iran and Turkey held talks on
Syria in Moscow on Tuesday after which they said they were ready to help
broker a Syrian peace deal. The United States sought to downplay its
absence from the talks, saying it was not a ‘snub’ and did not reflect a
decline of U.S. influence in the Middle East.”
Reuters:
Russia Says Its Air Strikes In Syria Have Killed 35,000 Rebels
“Russian air strikes in Syria have killed 35,000 rebel fighters and
succeeded in halting a chain of revolutions in the Middle East, Defence
Minister Sergei Shoigu said on Thursday. Speaking at a gathering of top
military officials that appeared designed to showcase Russia's military
achievements, Shoigu said Moscow's intervention had prevented the
collapse of the Syrian state. ‘We are now stronger than any potential
aggressor,’ President Vladimir Putin said at the same event at the
Defence Ministry in Moscow. Shoigu said Russian aircraft had flown 18,800
sorties in Syria since the start of the Kremlin's operation there last
year, destroying 725 training camps, 405 sites where weapons were being
made and killing 35,000 fighters.”
Reuters:
Vehicles Still Leaving Aleppo After Overnight Evacuation - U.N. In Syria
“Vehicles were still streaming out of eastern Aleppo on Thursday
morning after an evacuation overnight monitored by the U.N., a United
Nations official in Syria told Reuters on Thursday. Snow, bad weather and
the poor condition of some cars appeared to have slowed the operation on
Wednesday in east Aleppo, where only a small number of rebels are still
waiting to leave under an agreement with the Syrian government. ‘The
evacuation is still ongoing, monitors are still on site. About 300
private vehicles left overnight and this morning,’ the U.N. official
said.”
Iraq
Reuters:
Islamic State Claims Suicide Car Bombs That Killed At Least 23 East Of
Mosul
“Islamic State claimed three suicide car bombs that killed at least 15
civilians and eight Iraqi policemen on Thursday in an eastern suburb of
Mosul, according to a military statement. The attacks targeted Kokjali, a
suburb that the authorities said they had retaken from the jihadists
almost two months ago. A military spokesman said the car bombs went off
in a market. The U.S.-backed assault on Mosul, the jihadists' last major
stronghold in Iraq, was launched by a 100,000-strong alliance of local
forces on Oct. 17. It has become the biggest military operation in Iraq
since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein.”
Turkey
The
Wall Street Journal: Violence Bolsters Erdogan’s Plan For More
Presidential Power In Turkey
“Turkey is moving toward a referendum that if approved would give
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan near absolute power—and every new terrorist
attack is likely to increase his chances of winning the vote. This nation
of nearly 80 million people, a member of the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization, is targeted by Kurdish separatists and radical Islamists
alike. Over just the past two weeks, it witnessed two major bombings, in
Istanbul and the central city of Kayseri, and the assassination of the
Russian ambassador in the capital, Ankara.”
The
Daily Caller: Gulen Says Turkish Government Could Have Been Behind
Assassination
“Fethullah Gulen said on Thursday that the Turkish government may have
been behind the assassination of Russian ambassador Andrey Karlov earlier
this week and that the Turks could ‘facilitate’ other murders and blame
them on Gulenists, the followers of the U.S.-based cleric. Gulen, who is
considered a terrorist by Turkey’s president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan,
raised that possibility in a video statement released on Thursday. ‘The
most dangerous possibility, in my humble opinion, as I alluded before, is
that it appears that [the Turkish government] will facilitate other
assassinations and will attempt to blame them on Hizmet movement,’ Gulen
said in the video, which was released by the Alliance for Shared Values,
a non-profit that serves as the exiled imam’s PR shop.”
Reuters:
Monitoring Group Says Islamic State Video Shows Two Turkish Soldiers
Burned Alive
“Islamic State in Syria released a video on Thursday purporting to
show two captured Turkish soldiers being burned to death, according to
the U.S.-based SITE Intelligence Group which monitors militant groups
online. Reuters was not able to verify the report and no comment was
immediately available from Turkish officials. Late last month, Turkish
military officials said they had lost contact with two soldiers in
northern Syria, where the army is waging an offensive against Islamic
State.”
Afghanistan
The
Daily Caller: 13,000 Afghan Interpreters Await US Visas Under Taliban
Threat
“Nearly 13,000 Afghan families who assisted U.S. troops between 2001
and 2014 are waiting for a U.S. visa, The Associated Press reports. Many
interpreted for U.S. soldiers in dangerous areas, and face repeated death
threats from the Taliban. Some of the interpreters were even wounded on
combat missions with U.S. forces and have been in visa limbo for nearly
five years. ‘I’m living my days in hell. Even if someone is not really
looking at me, I feel so paranoid, like this guy is going to kill me,’ a
former U.S. interpreter told the AP. Another elaborated, ‘There’s a lot
of other interpreters who were shot, hurt, are crazy disabled, and all of
them are stuck in Afghanistan.’”
Saudi
Arabia
Reuters:
Saudi Arabia To Raise Military Spending 6 Pct -Budget
“Dec 22 Saudi Arabia, at war in Yemen and competing for regional
influence with arch-rival Iran, projects a 6.7 percent rise in defence
spending in 2017 to 191 billion riyals ($50.8 billion), according to
official budget figures released on Thursday. The kingdom, one of the
world's biggest military spenders, forecasts a decline in Security and
Regional Administration, a separate spending category that is
military-related, to 96.7 billion riyals from 102.3 billion. Military spending
was originally projected at 179 billion riyals in 2016 but actual
military spending has been around 205.1 billion. Security and Regional
Administration spending will be 100.6 billion in 2016, according to the
budget's preliminary estimates.”
Egypt
The
New York Times: Egypt’s Cruelty To Christians
“The Dec. 11 bombing of a church in the Cairo cathedral complex — the
seat of the Coptic pope — has been claimed by the Islamic State, although
the Egyptian government has blamed the Muslim Brotherhood. Whoever
planted the bomb that killed 27 people, including a 10-year-old girl,
when it ripped through a church full of Sunday worshipers understood well
how endemic bigotry in Egypt has left Christian lives at the whim of a
regime that pays lip service to protecting them, armed Islamists who
actively seek them harm, and a public that largely does not care. To
gauge the enormity of what happened at the church of St. Peter and St.
Paul, imagine a bombing in a church within the Vatican complex.”
Middle
East
The
New York Times: In Israel, Arrest Of Arab Lawmaker Stokes Debate On
Loyalty
“An Arab member of Israel’s Parliament was arrested on Thursday after
being accused of smuggling cellphones to Palestinian prisoners, capping
days of fractious debate that raised questions about the nature of
loyalty and identity in a predominantly Jewish state. Basel Ghattas, 60,
a magazine publisher who joined the Knesset in 2013, was taken into
custody by the police just hours after agreeing to surrender his
legislative immunity. Such a move is extremely rare in Israel, although
in recent years a former prime minister and a president have been charged
with corruption and rape and later sent to prison.”
The
Wall Street Journal: Israel Lobbied Trump To Help Derail U.N. Resolution
“Israeli government officials requested that U.S. President-elect
Donald Trump intervene in deliberations at the United Nations focused on
passing a new resolution on the Arab-Israel conflict, thrusting him into
the center of one of the world’s most intractable conflicts even before
taking office, according to Israeli officials briefed on the discussions.
Top Israeli officials had come to believe that the Obama administration
wasn’t going to block a U.N. resolution that seeks to define Israeli
construction in disputed territories as ‘illegal’ when the measure came
up for a scheduled vote by the Security Council on Thursday, according to
the officials.”
Nigeria
International
Business Times: Nigerian Army Arrests 560 Boko Haram Fighters As Sambisa
Forest Offensive Continues
“The Nigerian army has claimed it arrested 564 members of Boko Haram
terror group as the offensive against the Islamist outfit continues in
north-eastern Nigeria. Soldiers also freed 1,880 civilians held captive
by the terrorists. The military operation was conducted in the Sambisa
forest, Borno state, believed to be Boko Haram's last stronghold. Major
General Leo Irabor said: ‘Five hundred and 64 Boko Haram terrorists were
arrested while 19 others surrendered to our troops. Also, seven suspected
kidnappers and 37 foreigners were equally arrested.’”
United
Kingdom
The
Guardian: The UK Is At High Risk Of A Terror Attack – But How Has It
Avoided One So Far?
“London or any other part of the UK presents an obvious target for
Islamic terrorists, more so than Germany given the UK’s high-profile
involvement as the closest military ally of the US. UK intelligence
agencies repeatedly warn that it is just a matter of time before a
British target is hit. In a rare speech earlier this month, Alex Younger,
the head of the UK’s overseas intelligence agency MI6, described the
threat posed by groups such as Islamic State or its sympathisers as
‘unprecedented’. One of the most alarming warnings came last year from
Hamish de Bretton-Gordon, a former British army officer and chemical
weapons expert, who raised the risk of Isis mounting a chlorine attack in
the London Underground, similar to the sarin attack on the Tokyo subway
in 1995.”
The
Hill: Prince Charles: Anti-Immigrant Populism Echoes 'Dark Days Of The
1930s'
“Britain's Prince Charles says the new wave of anti-immigrant populism
worldwide has parallels with the ‘dark days of the 1930s.’ ‘We are now
seeing the rise of many populist groups around the world that are
increasingly aggressive towards those who adhere to a minority faith,’ he
said of discrimination against the world’s refugees on BBC 4 Radio’s
‘Thought for the Day’ Thursday. ‘All of this has deeply disturbing echoes
of the dark days of the 1930s.’ ‘I was born in 1948, just after the end
of World War II, in which my parents’ generation had fought and died in a
battle against intolerance, a monstrous extremism and an inhuman attempt
to exterminate the Jewish population of Europe,’ added Charles, the heir
to the United Kingdom's throne.”
Germany
The
Daily Caller: Former Intel Chief: Germany Finding It Near Impossible To
Keep Tabs On 7,000 Potential Terror Suspects
“MI6’s former head of counter-extremism Richard Barrett said Thursday
that German authorities are finding it virtually impossible to keep track
of the 7,000 potential terror suspects roaming around the country.
Intelligence failings have been at the forefront of the public’s mind
following Monday’s devastating truck terror attack on a Christmas market
in Berlin, leaving 12 dead and 48 injured. Not only did German
authorities arrest the wrong suspect, but they determined that the
actual suspect, Anis Amris, a known supporter of the Islamic State and
recruiter for the terror group, had been arrested three times in 2016
alone and should have already been deported. Amris is a 24-year-old
Tunisian asylum seeker.”
BBC:
Germany Arrests Two On Terror Charges
“Two men have been arrested in Germany on suspicion of planning an
attack on a shopping centre in Oberhausen near the Dutch border, police
say. The brothers, aged 31 and 28 and born in Kosovo, were detained early
on Friday in Duisburg. Germany is on high alert after Monday's attack in
Berlin, which left 12 dead. A Europe-wide manhunt continues for Anis
Amri, the Tunisian man suspected of driving a lorry into the
Breitscheidplatz Christmas market. Police said the Oberhausen attack had
been intended to target the CentrO shopping centre. Officers dressed in
civilian clothing had been sent to patrol the centre and a nearby
Christmas market after a tip from intelligence services, police said in a
statement. It is not yet known how advanced the preparations for the
attack were, or if others were involved, the statement said.”
Newsweek:
Germany Is In Denial About Its Ineffective Counter-Terrorism Structure
“On December 19, Germany was hit by its first major Islamist terror
attack, when a man steered a huge tractor-trailer truck into a Christmas
market next to the Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church in the center of former
West Berlin. The debate triggered by the event first focused on why the
main suspect, the Tunisian Anis Amri, had been able to plan, organize and
perpetrate the attack although he had been on a German terrorism
watchlist and should have been deported to his home country months ago.
Although this might seem a particularly scandalous blunder on the part
the German security authorities, many Germans have grown accustomed to
the erratic performance of their police and intelligence services in
recent years. In fact, the case of Anis Amri is paradigmatic for the
weakness of the German security architecture, which is not ready to cope
with the threats of the 21 st century.”
Europe
The
Daily Caller: European Officials: There’s ‘Nothing You Can Do’ To Stop
Christmas Market Attacks
“European officials grappling with the Monday Christmas market attack
by a likely Islamic State-inspired Tunisian refugee, say there is only so
much you can do to prevent such terrorism. Despite ISIS propaganda
specifically calling for attacks on Christmas markets, there were limited
security measures throughout the country. France’s largest Christmas
market is reportedly a prized target of ISIS, and authorities say they
may have to close it if threats continue to proliferate. German officials
responded to Monday’s attack by closing all Christmas markets in Berlin Tuesday.”
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