Eye on Extremism
August 5, 2016
Counter Extremism Project
Reuters:
U.S. Strikes Easing Advance Against Islamic State In Sirte, Says
Commander
“U.S. air strikes are easing the passage of Libyan forces as they
seek to clear Islamic State from the militant group's former North
African stronghold of Sirte, a senior field commander said on
Wednesday. Mohamed Darat said the first strikes, which took place on
Monday, had helped Libyan brigades under his command secure the Dollar
residential neighborhood by targeting militants who had been holding
out on the district's edge. Libya's U.N.-backed government requested
the strikes nearly three months into a campaign that had slowed due to
heavy casualties from sniper fire, mines and mortars. Losing Sirte
would be a huge blow for Islamic State, which took control of the city
midway along Libya's Mediterranean coastline last year. The group is
already under pressure from U.S.-backed campaigns in Syria and
Iraq.
Fox
Business: Fmr. CIA Analyst On U.S. Airstrikes Against
ISIS
“Former CIA analyst Tara Maller on the effectiveness of U.S.
airstrikes against ISIS”
Independent:
Isis 'Captures 3,000 Civilians' Trying To Escape Its Territory In
Iraq
“Isis is feared to have captured up to 3,000 civilians fleeing the
group’s territory in Iraq. The UN Refugee Agency said militants had
killed at least 12 people, who had been moving from villages in
al-Hawija district to seek safety in Kirkuk city on Thursday. A
security source told the Iraqi News website they died when Isis
fighters ‘fired openly’ on families as they tried to flee. They were
believed to be trying to escape Isis-controlled territory by moving
towards Kurdish Peshmerga forces who are attempting to drive militants
out of the region. Hawija lies between the provinces of Kirkuk,
Nineveh and Salahaddin has an estimated 400,000 inhabitants, many of
whom have been displaced by the war.”
Fox
News: Leader Of ISIS In Egypt's Sinai Killed By Air Force, Sources
Confirm
“The leader of the Islamic State’s operations in the volatile Sinai
Peninsula and mastermind of the October 2015 attack on a Russian
airliner in the region that left 224 dead has been killed by Egypt’s
air force, intelligence sources told Fox News Thursday. ISIS Sinai
leader Abu Dua al-Ansari was killed in Al Arish, the sources said. A
post on the Facebook page of the military's chief spokesman, Brig-Gen
Mohammed Samir, said al-Ansari was killed in an operation guided by
‘accurate intelligence.’ He helped organize ISIS activities in the
region including attacks against U.N. personnel in their Sinai base,
investigators said.”
The
New York Times: Israel Charges Palestinian Employee Of Aid Group With
Funneling Funds To Hamas
“The Palestinian manager of the Gaza branch of World Vision, a
major Christian aid organization, was charged by Israeli prosecutors
on Thursday with infiltrating the charity on behalf of Hamas and
funneling about $43 million in the group’s funds over the past six
years to the military wing of the Islamist militant group. While
neither the World Vision employee, Mohammad El Halabi, nor the aid
group have had a chance to review the evidence and respond to specific
charges, the allegations have cast a cloud over nongovernmental
organizations in Gaza. By Thursday evening in Jerusalem, the
Australian government announced the suspension of funding to World
Vision’s projects in the Palestinian territories. Describing the
allegations as ‘deeply troubling,’ Dave Sharma, the Australian
ambassador to Israel, announced the suspension in a statement on
Twitter, pending the outcome of an investigation by Australia’s
foreign affairs department.”
CNN:
Libya's Chaos, Explained In Five Graphics
“Five short years ago, Libya was one of the wealthiest and most
stable nations in Africa. The country had been led by Colonel Moammar
Gadhafi for more than 40 years, since he seized power in a 1969 coup,
and its six million citizens enjoyed the benefits of the country's
vast oil wealth. Then the Arab Spring took hold, Gadhafi was toppled
and summarily executed, and things got a whole lot more complicated.
After years of uncertainty and upheaval allowed ISIS militants to gain
a foothold in the country, the U.S. has begun carrying out airstrikes
to try and oust them. Fixing Libya is going to take more than a few
raids as these five graphics explain.”
NPR:
Who's In Charge Of Boko Haram? Split Emerges As 2 Men Claim
Leadership
Who's leading Boko Haram? Cracks are forming at the highest levels
of the Nigeria-based extremist group, as NPR's Ofeibea Quist-Arcton
reports. The Islamic State has officially named Abu Musab al-Barnawi
as the militant group's new leader and says he will pursue a different
strategy — but the old leader, Abubakar Shekau, says he's still in
charge. The announcement comes after a major military campaign against
Boko Haram that has rolled back the territory the group controls.
Reuters reports that ‘Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari, a former
military ruler who took office last year, has made it a priority to
defeat Boko Haram, which has tried to create a state adhering to
strict sharia law in the northeast during a seven-year
insurgency.’”
BBC:
More Armed Police Set To Protect London, Say Met Chief And
Mayor
“More armed police are to be seen on patrol in London, Metropolitan
Police commissioner Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe and Mayor of London Sadiq
Khan have said. Sir Bernard announced the move to reassure the public
and deter attackers following terrorist attacks in Europe. The Met has
already said the number of armed officers will go up in London by 600
to 2,800. And a further 900 armed officers are planned to be in
operation for the rest of England and Wales. But Steve White, chairman
of the Police Federation of England and Wales, said it may take two
years to fully train the 1,500 recruits planned nationally.”
NBC
News: Injured Man Dies Three Weeks After France Truck Attack, Bringing
Toll To 85
“A man who lost his wife and son in a truck attack in French
Riviera city of Nice three weeks ago died Thursday from injuries he
suffered in the rampage — bringing the death toll to 85, authorities
said. Pierre Hattermann's wife Francoise and son were killed in the
attack, and his 14-year-old daughter is still in hospital, according
to French newspaper Nice Matin and other media. Tunisian-born Mohamed
Lahouaiej Bouhlel barreled a 19-ton truck into the crowd celebrating
France's Bastille Day on the seafront promenade on July 14. He was
shot dead by police. French President Francois Hollande called it a
clear act of terrorism, but it has not been established that Bouhlel
was tied to any terrorist group. Franc'es interior minister said it
Bouhlel wasn't on any jihadi lists but it appears he was radicalized
quickly. Five people suspected of being accomplices were later
arrested in Nice.”
The
Wall Street Journal: Terrorist Suspects In Europe Got Welfare Benefits
While Plotting Attacks
“Belgian financial investigators looking into recent terror plots
have discovered a disturbing trend: Some of the suspects were
collecting welfare benefits until shortly before they carried out
their attacks. At least five of the alleged plotters in the Paris and
Brussels terror attacks partly financed themselves with payments from
Belgium’s generous social-welfare system, authorities have concluded.
In total they received more than €50,000, or about $56,000 at today’s
rate. The main surviving Paris suspect, Salah Abdeslam, collected
unemployment benefits until three weeks before the November
attacks—€19,000 in all, according to people familiar with the case. At
the time, he was manager and part-owner of a bar, which Belgian
officials say should have made him ineligible.”
United States
PBS
News Hour: Obama Appears At Pentagon To Discuss Strategy For
Countering ISIS
“The chaos in Libya after the fall of Moammar Gadhafi created a
vacuum, filled in part by the Islamic State. Now the United States is
stepping up pressure on the group’s stronghold there with new attacks
launched this week. President Obama visited the Pentagon today to
confer with his military leadership about the battle against the
Islamic State. He had this to say about the newest U.S. military front
in that fight in Libya. At the request of Libya’s government of
national accord, we are conducting strikes in support of
government-aligned forces as they fight to retake Sirte from ISIL, and
we will continue to support the government’s efforts to secure their
country.”
Reuters:
U.S. Designates Pakistan's Jamaat-Ur-Ahrar A 'Terrorist
Group'
“The United States has added the Pakistani militant group
Jamaat-ur-Ahrar to its list of global terrorists, triggering sanctions
against a faction that has staged multiple attacks on civilians,
religious minorities and soldiers. Jamaat-ur-Ahrar has claimed
responsibility for at least five major attacks in Pakistan since
December, including the Easter Sunday bombing in a public park that
killed 70 people in the city of Lahore. The group is a splinter
faction of the Pakistani Taliban movement that has also declared
loyalty to Islamic State's leadership in the Middle East. It also
claimed responsibility for the killing of two Pakistani employees of
the U.S. Consulate in the northwestern city of Peshawar in March.”
The
Wall Street Journal: U.S. Not Persuaded to Extradite Imam Over Turkey
Coup
“U.S. officials don’t expect to extradite an imam Turkey blames for
masterminding a failed coup because they aren’t convinced by the
evidence Ankara has presented and are troubled by threatening public
statements from Turkish officials, according to people familiar with
the discussions. U.S. and Turkish officials have privately discussed
scenarios under which Fethullah Gulen might be extradited, but
American authorities have yet to be persuaded there is a valid case
for extradition, these people said. Mr. Gulen, who lives in rural
Pennsylvania, has denied playing any role in the plot to overthrow
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. The more Turkish officials, including
the president and prime minister, talk publicly about Mr. Gulen’s
alleged role in the coup and demand his immediate transfer, the less
likely such a transfer becomes, the people said.”
The
Wall Street Journal: Barack Obama Says Islamic State Is Losing Ground
Militarily, Turning More To Terrorism
“President Barack Obama said Thursday that the Islamic State
militant group has shifted tactics from seeking new territory to using
terrorist attacks outside its strongholds in Iraq and Syria after
losing ground militarily there to the U.S.-led coalition. Mr. Obama,
speaking after a briefing on the campaign against Islamic State at the
Pentagon, said the group is relying on small-scale terrorist attacks
to generate ‘the kind of fear and concern that elevates their
profile.’ He said the shift is also a threat to the U.S. Mr. Obama
defended his strategy—which backs local ground forces and militias
fighting the extremist group with U.S. airstrikes and other military
assistance—by outlining how the tactics have rolled back the extremist
group’s territory in Iraq and Syria, while stemming its flow of
foreign fighters and cash.”
Syria
Reuters:
U.N. Hopeful Of Humanitarian Pause In Aleppo Fighting
“The United Nations said on Thursday that intensive diplomacy was
going on to try to agree a humanitarian pause in the fighting in the
Syrian city of Aleppo, and it hoped to see an agreement for a
comprehensive humanitarian plan in the next few days. The battle for
eastern Aleppo, pitting besieged rebels against Syrian, Russian and
Iranian-backed forces, has erupted amid a diplomatic vacuum and no
sign of a breakthrough in a U.S.-Russian efforts for a deal to unlock
a new round of peace talks. ‘There is still time, we cannot give up
hope. Bear with us and I think in next few days there might be some
movement,’ U.N. Deputy Special Envoy for Syria Ramzy Ezzeldin Ramzy
told reporters in Geneva.”
Radio
Free Europe: Syria Group Wants To Trade Bodies Of Five Russian
Helicopter Crew Members
“Syrian group said on August 4 that it has the bodies of five
people killed when a Russian helicopter was shot down and is demanding
the release of prisoners in exchange for the bodies. The Russian
military helicopter was shot down in opposition-held territory in
Syria’s Idlib Province on August 1, killing all five people onboard.
It was the biggest officially acknowledged loss of life for Russian
forces since they started operations in Syria in September 2015. The
demand for the exchange was signed off by a group calling itself the
General Foundation for Prisoners' Affairs. It wanted the release of
prisoners held in Syrian government jails and by Damascus's Lebanese
Shi'ite ally Hizballah in Lebanon. The group did not name the
prisoners it wanted to be released or say how many it wanted.”
The
Wall Street Journal: Fallout From Turkey Coup Leaves Syria Rebels In
The Lurch
“Some of the most intense fighting in the five-year Syrian war
erupted after last month’s failed Turkish coup—and it is probably no
coincidence. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan was an early and
indispensable backer of the uprising against President Bashar al-Assad
’s regime. Since 2011, Turkey served as a rear base and supplier for a
variety of Syrian rebel groups, including those on the Islamist
fringe. That support is now under threat. Many of the top Turkish
military and intelligence officials involved in programs to assist the
rebellion, including the commander of Turkey’s 2nd Army responsible
for borders with Syria and Iraq, have been detained for alleged
involvement in the July 15 putsch.”
Turkey
Reuters:
German Minister Sees `No Basis' For Talks With Turkey After Failed
Coup
“Turkey and Germany's relationship - essential to curbing mass
migration to Europe - has grown so bad the two countries have
virtually ‘no basis’ for talks, German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter
Steinmeier said on Thursday. Germany has serious concern about mass
arrests carried out by Turkish officials after a thwarted coup last
month, Steinmeier said. At the same time, Turkey feels Germany has not
taken the July 15 coup attempt seriously, and its government is
angered by German media reports suggesting it was orchestrated by
Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan. Relations between Germany and Turkey
have been tense for months following a June 2 vote by the German
parliament to brand the 1915 massacre of Armenians by Ottoman forces
as genocide, a move sharply criticised by Erdogan and other Turkish
officials.”
The
Wall Street Journal: In Europe, Some Contemplate A New Kind Of
Relationship With Turkey
“When Austrian Chancellor Christian Kern said this week it was time
for the European Union to reconsider membership talks with Turkey, he
set off a diplomatic firestorm. ‘Austrian PM calls our accession
negotiations a ‘diplomatic fiction.’ Actually what is fiction is a
democracy where far-right prevails,’ Turkey’s EU Affairs Minister Omar
Celik said in one of a series of outraged tweets Thursday—referring to
Austria’s October redo of a tight presidential race in which the
right-wing Freedom Party’s candidate now leads. Yet Mr. Kern’s remarks
echo a growing view in Europe that after 11 years of tortuously slow
membership talks, the negotiations have become a diplomatic sideshow
whose main purpose is to avoid a fight over shutting them down. Nor is
the frustration a one-way street. Turkish officials argue that many EU
capitals have long opposed Turkish membership but just wouldn’t admit
it.”
Afghanistan
BBC:
Afghanistan's Taliban Attack Foreign Tourist Convoy
“Militants have attacked a convoy of foreign tourists in west
Afghanistan, injuring six and their Afghan driver. The group of a
dozen travellers was being escorted by Afghan army personnel to Herat
city when it was ambushed, Afghan officials told the BBC. The tourists
comprised eight Britons, three US citizens and one German. Some
reportedly had light injuries and were being treated in hospital. A
spokesman for the Taliban said it had carried out the attack.
Afghanistan's main roads are notoriously dangerous, with militant
attacks and kidnappings frequent, many of them carried out by the
Taliban.”
Yemen
International
Business Times: Yemen Peace Efforts Flounder As Security Council Fails
To Agree On Support For UN Envoy
“Attempts by the United Nations to put an end to the 17-month-long
civil war in Yemen seem to have hit a road block with the Security
Council failing to agree on a statement that supports the UN special
envoy to Yemen. The council members, including Britain, wanted to
include a statement that criticises the rebels, which the UN
ambassador to Russia, Vitaly Churkin, said was an unacceptable demand.
With the clock ticking for the Arab world's poorest nation to sign a
UN-brokered peace deal, which requires the backing of Shia Muslim
rebels, failure to reach a consensus has a dealt a blow to the peace
efforts. Yemen's internationally recognised government announced
accepting a proposed peace agreement on Sunday (31 July) with a
pre-condition that the Iran-backed Houthi rebels and the forces loyal
to the former president sign the deal by 7 August.”
Reuters:
Exclusive: U.N. Report On Yemen Says Houthis Used Human Shields,
Islamic State Got Cash
“Yemen's Houthi rebels used civilians as human shields, Islamic
State militants in the country received an influx of cash and al Qaeda
has improved its roadside bombs, according to a confidential report by
United Nations experts monitoring sanctions on Yemen. The 105-page
report to the U.N. Security Council, seen by Reuters on Thursday, also
said a military coalition led by Saudi Arabia had violated
international humanitarian law by bombing a civilian home in Al-Mahala
village in May, and the monitors were investigating three other cases
in which civilians were bombed. The midterm report covered the past
six months. The experts noted that they have been unable to travel to
the Arabian Peninsula country so they gathered information
remotely.”
Saudi Arabia
Reuters:
Saudi Investigation Largely Defends Deadly Air Strikes In
Yemen
“An investigation by a Saudi-led coalition presented on Thursday
largely defended a series of deadly coalition air strikes on markets,
clinics and a wedding in Yemen, citing the presence of armed
militiamen at the sites. Results of the probe, presented at a news
conference in Riyadh, found that one of eight alleged mass-casualty
air attacks in the second half of 2015 that it reviewed involved
incomplete intelligence that led to civilian casualties. Rights groups
and witnesses told Reuters at the time of the incidents from Yemen's
mountain north to coastal south said air attacks had together killed
hundreds of civilians.”
Egypt
Reuters:
In Egypt, An Italian Student’s Research Stirred Suspicion Before He
Died
“Regeni’s body was found on the side of the Cairo-Alexandria
highway on Feb. 3 by passengers on a bus that had broken down,
according to a police source. Egyptian forensics officials said the
body showed signs of torture, including cigarette burns and beatings.
Regeni’s mother, Paola, later told Italy’s parliament that her son’s
injuries were so bad she identified him only by the tip of his nose.
Egyptian human rights groups said the torture suggested Egyptian
security services had killed the student, allegations those services
and the government have strongly denied. It remains unclear who killed
Regeni or why. But piecing together his activity in the months leading
up to his death, it is apparent that two factors put the student at
risk: his passionate interest in political and economic issues and his
belief that Egypt needed change.”
Middle East
The
Wall Street Journal: Israel Alleges Millions In Christian Aid Diverted
To Hamas
“Israel said it arrested an employee of international Christian
charity World Vision for allegedly siphoning off tens of millions of
dollars in aid destined for projects in the Gaza Strip and giving it
to Islamist movement Hamas. Prosecutors on Thursday charged Mohammed
El-Halabi, director of the Gaza branch of World Vision, with funding
Hamas with up to $7.2 million a year over more than five years. He was
detained June 15 at a crossing into the Palestinian enclave. A lawyer
for Mr. Halabi couldn’t immediately be reached for comment. Mr. Halabi
took advantage of his position to divert World Vision’s resources
‘from the needy to the benefit of Hamas’ terrorist and military
activities,’ Israel’s Prime Minister’s Office said in a
statement.”
Haaretz:
ISIS Plans Attack On U.S. Air Bases, Israeli Intel Firm
Says
“An Israeli cyber intelligence company claims it has hacked ISIS
communications and learned about the group’s plans to attack U.S. air
bases in Kuwait, Bahrain and Saudi Arabia. Intsights, which is run by
former Israel Defense Forces intelligence officers and based in
Herzliya, said Wednesday it had hacked the forum on which ISIS
operatives publish terror attack plans, Channel 10 reported. According
to Intsights, ISIS uploads potential targets to the forum, hosted
through the Telegram encrypted messaging app. Some targets listed
there, such as the church in Normandy, France where a priest was
murdered on July 26, have been attacked after appearing on the
site.”
Nigeria
The
Guardian: Isis Tries To Impose New Leader On Boko Haram In
Nigeria
“Two of the purported leaders of Boko Haram are apparently pitted
against each other in a power struggle within Islamic State’s west
African affiliate. Isis announced on Tuesday that the group that has
ravaged northern Nigeria for the past seven years had a new leader –
Abu Musab al-Barnawi. An Isis magazine carried an interview with him
and said he was previously a Boko Haram spokesman. However an audio
message apparently recorded by Abubakar Shekau, the long-time leader
of Boko Haram, who has appeared in many of its videos, was released on
Thursday denying al-Barnawi’s claim.”
The
New York Times: Boko Haram Leader Speaks On Youtube, Deepening Signs
Of Split
“A new voice recording described by security experts as coming from
the longtime leader of Boko Haram deepened speculation about a
fracture in the militant group, which has pledged allegiance to the
Islamic State and has terrorized Nigeria and its neighbors for years.
In the 10-minute recording uploaded to YouTube Wednesday night, the
Boko Haram leader, Abubakar Shekau, referred to what appeared to be a
split in Boko Haram over whether Muslims who live among nonbelievers
are good Muslims whose lives deserve to be spared. Taken together, the
Islamic State publication and Mr. Shekau’s recording suggest he is
leading a Boko Haram faction bent on indiscriminate killing, while Mr.
Barnawi is leading a group that might be more willing to show mercy to
Muslims.”
United Kingdom
Sputnik
News: Some 84% Of UK Nationals Expect Terrorist Attacks In Country -
Pol
“According to the YouGov poll, only 8 percent of the UK public
think an attack is unlikely. The authors of the survey note that the
perceived threat of terrorism in the United Kingdom has increased
steadily over the last six years. At least 43 percent of respondents
are dissatisfied with government's efforts to combat Islamic
extremism, while 32 percent consider that the authorities are doing
as much as needed, according to the poll. The survey comes after a
wave of terrorist attacks shook a number of European cities in the
past several months, including in Germany, France and Belgium.”
The
Wall Street Journal: No Indication Of Terrorism In London Stabbing,
Police Say
“U.K. police said there was no evidence that a 19-year-old man who
killed an American woman from Florida and injured five other people in
a stabbing attack in central London had been radicalized or motivated
by terrorism. The man, a Norwegian of Somali origin, remained in
custody Thursday after being arrested on suspicion of murder in the
Russell Square attack late Wednesday. Based on interviews with him and
his family, police said they believed mental health was the main
factor in the assault. Mr. Rowley said police believed that the
stabbing was a spontaneous attack and that the victims were chosen at
random. The suspect, who wasn’t named, hasn’t been charged. A
spokesman for the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs said he had
moved to the U.K. in 2002.”
Germany
RT:
Terrorism Wave In Germany Forces Berlin To Plan Broad Range Of Civil
Defense Measures
“Against the backdrop of terrorist attacks that rocked Europe – and
Germany in particular – in recent months, the German government is set
on updating the system of national civil defense for the first time in
some 20 years, Bild reported on Thursday. Citing excerpts from the
69-page draft version of the new document which is expected to be
adopted by ministers on August 24, the newspaper reports the proposed
changes cover a variety of spheres, from increasing vaccine and basic
supplies storage to stocking up on chemical protective suits to be
distributed among the population in case of emergency. Other issues
covered in the excerpts published by Bild include protection of
cultural property and self-protection capabilities of the population,
like keeping a fully-stocked first-aid and medicine kit.”
France
CNBC:
Armed French Military Winched On To Ferries To Ward Off
Terrorism
“Armed French servicemen are being dropped by helicopter on to
ferries in the English Channel in a bid to prevent terrorist attacks.
Sea marshals carrying guns are arriving by helicopter as
French-flagged vessels leave English territorial waters on their way
to France. The first patrol took place Monday, when three French sea
marshals arrived on the Brittany Ferries vessel Mont St Michel by
helicopter. They then proceeded to patrol the bridge and passenger
areas of the vessel. Speaking to CNBC Thursday, a spokesperson for
Brittany Ferries said the dramatic boarding of ships in mid-journey
was due to maritime law.”
Europe
Reuters:
Cyprus To Deport Austrian With 'Terror' Links:
Official
“Cyprus will deport a ‘radicalized’ Austrian man suspected of being
a security risk by Interpol, authorities said on Thursday. The
28-year-old man was detained on Wednesday at a checkpoint in the
capital Nicosia in an area straddling a ceasefire line dividing the
Greek and Turkish Cypriot communities. The man, whom police sources
said was traveling alone, was crossing from the Turkish to the Greek
side when he was stopped by Greek Cypriot police for a routine
passport check. ‘His name was on a list of suspects for terrorism,’
said Justice Minister Ionas Nicolaou, who said the man had been
‘radicalize’. The man would be deported to Austria, Nicolaou said.
Poland's Interpol branch had the man on a suspect list.”
RT:
ISIS Wants ‘Loads Of Attacks In England, Germany & France,’ Jailed
Jihadist Says
“A former Islamic State jihadist, German-born Harry Sarfo, has
revealed that the terrorist group is actively seeking volunteers in
Germany and the UK to carry out ‘loads of attacks at the same time in
England, Germany and France.’ Members of the far-reaching Islamic
State’s (IS, formerly ISIS) intelligence service, called Emni in
Arabic, allegedly told Sarfo they were first and foremost interested
in waging terrorism across the globe. In an interview with the New
York Times, Sarfo, who is currently serving a three-year term on
terrorism charges at a maximum security prison near Bremen, recalled
what one masked commander once told him."
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