All of the Islamic terror groups are now linked to al-Qaeda.more than 50,
worldwide with combined membership of over 200,000.

 

Bruce

 

Terror groups unite in Europe to recruit fighters for Iraq 

 

http://www.azdailysun.com/non_sec/nav_includes/story.cfm?storyID=104616 

 

BERLIN (AP) -- Islamic terror groups are becoming increasingly active in
Germany and coordinating with militants across Europe to recruit fighters to
join the insurgency in Iraq, equipping them with fake passports, money and
medical supplies, security officials say. 

 

One of the best examples of the cross-continent cooperation involves an
Algerian man arrested in Germany and now on trial in Italy for allegedly
helping Muslims from Somalia, Egypt, Iraq and Morocco recruit some 200
militants from around Europe to fight in Iraq. 

 

Many in Germany's Islamic communities have shown sympathy for Muslims
fighting jihad, or holy war, in places like Chechnya or Bosnia, but
authorities say a growing number of sympathizers are taking an active role
themselves since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq. 

 

"The war in Iraq has somehow mobilized this scene so that people who before
just had some sort of contact or sympathies with extremist groups now think
they have to do something," Manfred Murck, deputy head of the Hamburg
government agency that tracks extremists, told The Associated Press. 

 

"It's a main topic that brings people to action that they otherwise might
not have taken. In past years they were talking about jihad, but not doing
anything." 

Ansar al-Islam, a group with links to al-Qaida and Jordanian terrorist Abu
Musab al-Zarqawi, who is leading attacks on U.S. and Iraqi security forces
in Iraq, has been under scrutiny for its efforts to channel money and
fighters to Iraq from Germany and other European countries. 

 

Though most German attention immediately following al-Qaida's Sept. 11
attacks was on Hamburg -- where three of the four suicide hijackers had
lived and studied -- recent efforts have broadened across the country and
continent. 

In December, three suspected members of Ansar al-Islam were arrested in
Berlin on charges of plotting to assassinate interim Iraqi Prime Minister
Ayad Allawi during a visit to Berlin in what authorities believe was a
spontaneous plan based on opportunity. 

 

Lokman Armin Mohammed, an Iraqi, was indicted last year in Munich on charges
he provided logistical, financial and recruiting support for Ansar al-Islam,
allegedly organizing medical equipment for insurgents and the passage of men
to join the fight. Still awaiting trial after his 2003 arrest, Mohammed also
is accused of being responsible for secretly bringing seriously injured
insurgents back through Italy and across France for treatment in Britain. 

 

"The Islamist scene in Germany is very well-connected, and not only in
Germany," a senior German intelligence official told AP on condition of
anonymity. "Muslim activities are more globalist -- more pan-European --
than Europeans are." 

 

Murck, the Hamburg official, cited the example of Algerian Abderrazak
Mahdjoub as an indication of cross-border connections at work within Ansar
al-Islam. He was arrested in Hamburg in November 2003 on an Italian warrant
and extradited to Milan in March 2004. 

 

Mahdjoub went on trial in Milan in February on charges he collaborated with
Somali Ciise Maxamed Cabdullaah, Egyptian El Ayashi Radi, Moroccan Housni
Jamal and Iraqi Amin Mostafa Mohamed to recruit some 200 militants from
around Europe to fight in Iraq for Ansar al-Islam. 

 

Mahdjoub was arrested in Syria days before the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003
and deported back to Germany, where he was investigated. However, charges
were never brought for lack of evidence. 

 

"He tried to go to Iraq and we assumed he was intending to fight there, but
then other investigations, especially in Italy, found out he was part of a
structure recruiting for Iraq," Murck said. 

 

Murck said he had no solid numbers for how many people might have gone from
Germany to fight in Iraq, but added that it did not appear to be many. 

"If you look at Hamburg, you can count them on two hands -- those who have
gone or who tried to go," he said. 

 

European anti-terrorist officials have estimated that perhaps a few hundred
militants have gone to Iraq as a result of recruiting efforts on the
continent, mostly Muslims whose families immigrated from the Middle East or
North Africa. 

 

In another major German case, 15 suspects -- some connected with Ansar
al-Islam and Al-Tawhid, another terror group linked to al-Zarqawi -- were
picked up in nationwide raids in mid-January centering on the southern twin
cities of Ulm and Neu-Ulm. The suspects included nationals of Germany,
Egypt, Tunisia, Algeria, Libya and Bulgaria. 

 

Authorities alleged the network raised an unspecified amount of money,
produced fake passports and recruited people for jihad. 

At the end of January, two other suspected al-Qaida members were arrested in
Mainz and Bonn on allegations they were plotting an attack in Iraq. The pair
were identified only as Ibrahim Mohamed K., a 29-year-old Iraqi, and Yasser
Abu S., a 31-year-old Palestinian. 

 

The Iraqi allegedly trained at Osama bin Laden's camps in Afghanistan and
fought American forces there. He is accused of recruiting suicide attackers
in Germany -- including the Palestinian -- and providing logistical help to
al-Qaida. 

 

"Germany is not the main target of militant Islamist operations -- today's
line goes from Germany or other European countries to Iraq," said Rolf
Tophoven, an expert at the Essen-based Institute for Terrorism Research and
Security Issues. 

 

"They try to recruit and bring potential suiciders -- potential terrorists
-- together and they will send them from Germany to Iraq to fight against
the allied forces under the leadership of the United States." 

 

There's only sketchy evidence that any of the recruited radicals have
returned to Europe from fighting in Iraq, but that remains a top fear,
Tophoven said. 

"The big threat is that they will eventually come back to European countries
and they will come back with an image, with a reputation as heroes who
fought the unbelievers, as it was in the war against the former Soviet Union
in Afghanistan," he said. 

 

"If they do, they come back from Iraq trained, they know how to fight, they
know how to do an ambush, how to make a bomb, and so on, and intelligence is
afraid of these developments."



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