http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/english-speaking-militants-concern-us.aspx?PageID=238&NID=42552&NewsCatID=358

English-speaking militants concern US 
WASHINGTON - Reuters 

Increasing number of English-speaking Islamist extremists and their influx to 
Syria worry the US. “We’ve been monitoring [these developments] and it’s 
concerning,” says a US official 
 
Members of Liwa Hamzah, a newly formed Islamist brigade from the Syrian eastern 
city of Deir Ezzor stand on top of a mosque holding the flags. AFP photo 

Increased use of English in videos by Islamic extremists and a rising flow of 
recruits from Europe to fight in Syria and on other battlegrounds is disturbing 
U.S. officials, who fear some could return to Europe or come to the United 
States to plot attacks. 

Last week, a man who spoke English and Arabic calling himself Abu Ahmed 
al-Amriki starred in a new video message posted on jihadist websites and 
produced by al-Shabaab, the Islamic militant group based in Somalia. 

Al-Amriki, whose face was blurred and whose real identity is not known, called 
on Muslims to give up their comfortable lives in the West and head for the 
front lines in places like Somalia, Mali and Afghanistan to wage Islamic holy 
war, according to an account by the Long War Journal, a counterterrorism blog 
published by the conservative Foundation for the Defense of Democracies.

Although the fears of the West have sometimes proven overblown, this video and 
others highlight what senior U.S. and European security officials say is a 
fresh increase in English-speaking recruits, including dozens of British 
citizens, traveling abroad to fight, most notably in Syria. The concern, 
officials said, is that many English-speaking recruits are joining the most 
militant, anti-Western Syrian rebel factions. 

Earlier in February, a person describing himself as an “American mujahidin,” or 
holy warrior, posted the second of two video messages touting his involvement 
with rebels fighting the government of Syria, according to Flashpoint Global 
Partners, a New York-based consulting group that monitors militant websites.

Step-by-step instructions

Simultaneously, U.S. officials said, English-language literature has blossomed 
online exhorting aspiring militants to violence wherever they are and providing 
them step-by-step instructions on how to use household materials to cause death 
and destruction.

“We’ve been monitoring [these developments] and yes, it’s concerning,” said 
Paul Browne, Deputy Commissioner and spokesman of the New York Police 
Department, which since the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks has built aggressive 
counterterrorism operations.

In recent days, al-Qaeda’s Yemen-based affiliate, Al-Qaeda in the Arabian 
Peninsula (AQAP), has issued two slick English-language magazines for the 
would-be weekend holy warrior.

Holy warrior guidebook

The tenth issue of “Inspire,” AQAP’s irregular but well-produced Internet 
magazine, contains what amounts to a list of Westerners the group has targeted 
for death. They include novelist Salman Rushdie, anti-Islamic Dutch politician 
Geert Wilders and Terry Jones, the Koran-burning Florida preacher.

The second new publication by “Inspire,” calls itself the “Lone Mujahid 
Pocketbook.” It goes on to offer how-to guides, complete with pictures and 
maps, for causing traffic accidents, staging “lethal ambushes,” “destroying 
buildings” by creating gas leaks and igniting them. 
March/08/2013


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