Home front terror: Elite Australian soldiers fear extremists will target their families while they fight terrorists in Middle East
http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/nsw/home-front-terror-elite-australian-soldiers-fear-extremists-will-target-their-families-while-they-fight-terrorists-in-middle-east/story-fni0cx12-1227072683803
- The Sunday Telegraph
- September 28, 2014
Elite Australian soldiers fear their families will be targeted by extremists while they are fighting in the Middle East.
ELITE commandos sent to the Middle East to lead Australia’s part in
the fight against terror fear they are leaving their families vulnerable
to attack by extremists.
It is understood mysterious strangers have visited Defence
Department homes in suburbs near the military barracks in Holsworthy and
nearby Steele Barracks in Moorebank with vague or implausible excuses.Soldiers believe radical Islamic splinter groups have been trying to identify potential targets with a high propaganda value. The word “stalking” has been used to describe it, one source said.
It followed extraordinary advice to crack troops from 2nd Commando Regiment at Holsworthy to ditch their uniforms in public, right down to their watches, to avoid becoming targets.
A media spokesman said the Chief of the Defence Force, Air Chief Marshal Mark Binskin, advised serving members on how to protect their personal safety on Facebook last Thursday.
In the message he advised ADF members to: “Exercise common sense and judgment when considering where and when to wear your uniform in public.”
Commandos stationed at Holsworthy, in southwest Sydney, are among the toughest fighting troops in the world. They are what soldiers call “shooters” or “gunslingers”, trained to the highest level.
They’re good. That’s why some have been already landed in the Middle East as part of Australia’s response to the threat of Islamic State terrorists there. And it is why they have become prime targets in the war of nerves suddenly being waged by a few rogue Islamists and on millions of other citizens.
Soldiers’ families live near the Holsworthy Army Barracks, where they train.
Elite Australian soldiers hold grave fears for the families they have left behind in Australia.
In the normal course of events, families safe at home worry about loved ones serving overseas. But there is nothing normal about the events that led to the huge anti-terror raids in Sydney and Brisbane, followed by the attempt to kill two police officers in Victoria on Tuesday.
The truth is, Australian soldiers in the Middle East have almost as much reason to worry about the safety of their families as the families have to worry about them after IS posted an online fatwa calling on followers to target not just Australian troops but also citizens.
Army sources said the anti-terrorist raids came after Middle Eastern men visited military homes using implausible excuses. Military sources working with police have linked some of them to violent groups involved in the Cronulla riots in 2005.
“Chatter” picked up by security services indicated Australian-based radicals have been urged to make an attack similar to the grisly slaying of British soldier Lee Rigby in London early last year. Rigby was run down with a car then hacked to death by two recent converts to Islam, since jailed for life.
It’s no surprise the security level at Holsworthy has been boosted from “Safe Base Bravo” to “Safe Base Charlie”. This means everyone who enters the base is treated as a potential threat. Every vehicle is searched for weapons or explosives.
Authorities took part in massive terror raids earlier this month, in suburbs including Marsfield.
The plot showed what a tempting target the army base makes. This is partly because it is “smack in the middle of the bad lands”, as one source described it.
Police patrols were stepped up at major sporting events. Picture: Nathan Dyer
Five days ago it almost did. A wild-eyed 18-year-old, apparently stirred to a frenzy by IS propaganda, badly wounded two policemen.
Despite denials by police, it seems all too possible the second knife and the flag Numan Haider carried were part of a mad plan to behead a victim in the name of jihad.
It’s easier and more politically comfortable to treat Haider as a kid who flipped out than to add fuel to the fire of Islamic machismo by elevating a deluded teen into some sort of martyr.
The sad fact is that young fools like Haider are easily manipulated by malevolent Mujahideen elders. And the fact his plan was crazy doesn’t mean it wasn’t a plan.
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