Woolwich killing: The long-feared attack 

Wednesday's events in 
Woolwich have shocked the UK - but this was precisely the kind of attack that 
security chiefs have long feared could come. 
Assuming that this turns out to be definitely an attack on a 
soldier, then the warning signs that it would happen can be found in the heart 
of al-Qaeda's violent ideology and how that has been interpreted 
by followers in the UK and other Western nations. 
The mindset of violent jihadists is influenced by many 
different factors - but one common factor among those who have been 
involved in acts of politically-motivated violence is the basic 
principle that they oppose a Western presence in the Islamic world. 
Sometimes when purely political Islamists refer to this 
presence, they mean cultural pollution - the arrival of influences that 
they don't particularly want to see. Think scantily-clad pop stars 
beamed around the world on satellite TV. 
But for jihadists, it really comes down to the presence of 
soldiers - and an entire framework of belief that sees those personnel, 
whatever role they have been given under international law, as the enemy of 
Islam. That argument is often backed up with graphic images online 
of the suffering of ordinary women and children. It's all designed to 
whip up anger and a sense of burning injustice - the kind of injustice 
that leads people to be convinced that something must be done. 
Now, most people who feel a sense of injustice obviously 
combat it in purely peaceful means. The point about terrorism is that 
the sense of injustice becomes a springboard for mental somersaults in 
the mind of someone who thinks that indiscriminate violence can create 
justice. 
Bilal Abdulla was the Iraqi doctor who tried to bomb London 
and Glasgow Airport in 2007. At his trial he spoke clearly and 
coherently about how he became radicalised because he perceived that the 
British and Americans were murdering his people, 
rather than liberating a country from a dictator. 
Back to the main point. The UK has witnessed a series of 
protests by radical Islamist groups that have been organised to 
specifically protest against soldiers who have served in Afghanistan. 
The most infamous of these was an extremely tense incident in 2009 when a 
now-banned organisation disrupted a homecoming parade by 
the Royal Anglian Regiment in Luton. 
 This man was photographed brandishing a knife and speaking to a woman at the 
scene 
The difficulty for the security services is establishing who is simply letting 
off steam and who is genuinely on the road to becoming a threat to public 
safety. What makes that job harder is that plotters 
are increasingly working alone, undirected from what remains of 
al-Qaeda's leadership. Armed with the ideology, they're expected to just get on 
with whatever terrible plan they have. 
So while every counter-terrorism intelligence operation 
starts with trying to get into the head of an "individual of interest" - it's 
ultimately about whether they are dangerous. 
This underbelly of anger over the military's role overseas 
has regularly featured in major counter-terrorism prosecutions - but it 
has also been part of attack plans on previous occasions. 
In 2007, a joint investigation by the police and MI5 
apprehended a Birmingham man who wanted to kidnap a British soldier. 
Parviz Khan wanted to emulate jihadists in Iraq by beheading a 
serviceman on camera before circulating the film online.  He's now 
serving a life sentence. 
The most well-known comparable anti-military incident 
elsewhere is the Fort Hood shootings in the USA, in which 13 people were killed 
by an army major reportedly radicalised by an al-Qaeda cleric. 
More recently, two other groups in the UK have been jailed after considering 
targeting soldiers. 
One of these cells talked about attacking Wooton Bassett, the Wiltshire town 
that used to come to a standstill as the coffins of 
personnel killed in Iraq and Afghanistan were repatriated. 
The justification consistently deployed by extremists 
involved in these incidents is that the military took the war to Muslim 
countries - so they are now bringing it back. 
"We must fight them as they fight us. An eye for an eye, a 
tooth for a tooth," said the Woolwich attacker who spoke with a London 
accent. 
"I apologise that women have had to witness this today, but in our land our 
women have to see the same."

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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