http://www.fortwayne.com/mld/newssentinel/news/editorial/17211553.htm

Alleged terror plot foiled: Dumb luck helped


 

The following editorial appeared in the Philadelphia Inquirer on Thursday,
May 10:

X X X

Police often say they're fortunate so many of the world's criminals are
stupid. And stupidity does abound in the case of the alleged terrorists in
Cherry Hill, N.J.

To wit, the FBI says the suspects practiced for their jihad against Fort Dix
by playing paintball. They recorded video of themselves firing guns and
shouting "God is great!" in Arabic, then turned over the ominous recording
to a clerk at Circuit City in Mount Laurel, N.J., to make a DVD. They
apparently didn't know that federal agents were watching their house for
months, a development obvious to worried neighbors on the quiet street.

There's so much stupidity alleged that you might be tempted to chuckle at
the suspects' ineptitude - a case of "Jihadi Jerks in Jersey." But that
doesn't mean this reputed terrorist cell was harmless, or that
law-enforcement officials had an easy job. Assuming that the allegations are
proven to be true, there was good police work and appropriate suspicion by
people who could have looked the other way.

Start with the clerk at the electronics store. While the video sounds
alarming, there have been more obvious examples of threats to U.S. security
in recent years that fell through the cracks of law enforcement. This store
employee did the right thing by contacting local police, who brought in
federal officials. That one phone call got the investigation rolling.

Then the FBI infiltrated the group, recorded the conversations of suspects,
and built a case for more than one year. Officials arrested the young men
earlier this week without anyone being harmed. Their backgrounds seemed so
utterly benign. Three brothers - Shain, Eljvir and Dritan Duka - worked as
roofers in Cherry Hill. Mohamad Shnewer was a cabdriver in Philly. Serdar
Tatar worked at a 7-Eleven near Temple University. Agron Abdullahu was a
supermarket baker.

The group's lack of sophistication might help to explain why the alleged
plot to kill soldiers in the United States failed. But the fact that such a
group allegedly sprouted in Cherry Hill brings home a troubling aspect of
the so-called war on terrorism.

Our national focus has been on fighting terrorists abroad "so they won't
follow us home." The Cherry Hill gang was already here - three of them
having entered the country illegally years ago.

They had no direct contacts overseas to Osama bin Laden nor to anyone else
in al-Qaeda, so far as the FBI knows. What they allegedly did share was a
bond in a misguided interpretation of Islam, and an enthusiasm for Jihadist
rhetoric. If that's the formula for creating "home grown" terrorists,
ensuring security within our borders has become more challenging than many
of us had imagined.

 



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