Wave of terror could result
from training, expertise gained in fighting with al Qaeda rebels
Bill Gertz
Significant numbers of
American and European jihadists are traveling to Syria to join Islamist rebels,
prompting new fears of a future wave of al Qaeda terror attacks in the United
States and Europe, according to U.S. officials.
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Syrian rebels open fire as
they battle against the Syrian forces in Aleppo, Syria. Photo: AP
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Several thousand foreign
terrorists, as well as Americans, are joining the Islamist faction of the
now-divided Syrian rebels battling the regime of Syrian President Bashar
al-Assad.
Most are joining the al-Nusra
Front, al Qaeda’s main terrorist group in Syria, along with smaller Islamist
militias made up of nationals from more than a dozen foreign countries.
A U.S. official familiar with
intelligence reports said the influx of Americans and Europeans to Islamist
rebel forces in Syria is increasing the threat of future terrorists attacks
here and in Europe.
“There’s a real concern in the
U.S. government about what happens to these guys when they are done and they
come home,” this official said. “Right now they are getting training to be al
Qaeda terrorists.”
Said a second official: “The
Syrian opposition is benefiting from a steady flow of foreign fighters who seem
to be joining a variety of Islamist-oriented brigades or starting up
nationality-based units.”
The second official said a few
hundred Europeans currently are in Syria and are mainly Sunni Muslims who
traveled over land to reach the rebel groups. “Of course there’s concern that
trained-up in Syria they could eventually reverse course and threaten their
home countries,” this official said.
U.S. intelligence agencies
have been closely monitoring the flow of foreign terrorists into Syria for the
past year. They have watched scores of jihadists joining mainly the al-Nusra
Front each month. Others have joined the Chechen-led Jaysh Al Muhajirin wal
Ansar, which has fought together with al-Nusra.
Al-Nusra also joined forces
with the Iraqi al Qaeda group, Islamic State of Iraq, to create a new group
called the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.
U.S. intelligence estimates
put the number of foreign fighters in Syria at up to 6,000 people, of which
around 17 percent are thought to be from outside the region.
Most of the foreign fighters
are from Middle Eastern, North African, and Central Asian states, including
Libya, Egypt, Jordon, Kuwait, Lebanon, Morocco, Tunisia, Saudi Arabia, Qatar,
Algeria, and United Arab Emirates.
However, the terrorists that
are entering Syria from the West are raising new concerns about future domestic
terror attacks. Included in this group are jihadists from the United States,
Russia, Chechnya, Canada, France, Ireland, Kosovo, and Britain.
For many, the fighting is the
first experience of putting their radical Islamic faith into action on the
battlefield, the officials said.
Germany’s Interior Minister
Hans-Peter Friedrich was quoted in the online Neue Oz Online in May as saying
there were as many as 700 European jihadists in Syria.
A spokesman for the National
Counterterrorism Center had no immediate comment on the number of American
jihadists estimated to be fighting in Syria.
Matthew G. Olsen, director of
the National Counterterrorism Center, said during a speech to the Aspen
Security Forum last month that his centers major concern is the flow of foreign
fighters to Syria.
“Syria has become really the
predominant jihadist battlefield in the world,” Olsen said. “We see foreign
fighters going from western Europe and, in some cases, in a small number of
cases from the United States to Syria to fight as part of the opposition.”
Olsen said the security
concern is that the fighters will become further radicalized and train end
“then returning as part of really a global jihadist movement to western Europe
and potentially to the United States.”
According to the officials,
most of the western jihadists are either Muslim immigrants or converts.
It is these Caucasian converts
that are raising security concerns, the officials said. Al Qaeda has been
trying for years to recruit Americans and Europeans as terrorists because they
are believed to be capable of more easily evading western security monitoring.
Patrick Poole, a private
counterterrorism analyst, said terrorist groups have welcomed Americans joining
their ranks.
“Their presence serves as a
vehicle for recruitment and fundraising from the West, which is what we saw in
recent years with al-Shabaab recruiting and fundraising from the Somali
communities in the United States,” Poole said in an interview.
“These American jihadis are
used for propaganda purposes, extending the group’s message into the heart of
infidel lands, as we’ve seen in the cases of Omar Hammami, and just last week,
al Qaeda’s chief English-language spokesman Adam Gadahn.”
Gadahn, an American, said in a
statement in July that Syria is the next target for takeover by al Qaeda, and
he urged jihadists in Syria not to cooperate with western-backed rebels there.
On Sunday, Gadahn issued
another statement calling for terrorist attacks on western diplomats in the
Arab world.
Poole said Syria today is
similar to the 1980s jihad in Afghanistan against the Soviet occupation, which
was a focal point for building terrorist networks in the United States for
domestic attacks.
“Undoubtedly, the examples of
Americans joining up with Syrian jihadists will play a role in continuing the
radicalization of future home-grown terrorists,” Poole said. “Islamic groups
here will hold up the example of Amiir Farouk Ibrahim, the Egyptian-American
who was killed in Syria just a few weeks ago and who was radicalized at a
community college right here in my hometown of Columbus, Ohio.”
Another example was Nicole
Mansfield, a single mother from Flint, Mich., who was killed traveling with al
Qaeda fighters in Syria last May.
Both will be used as examples
for American Muslims to follow, Poole said.
Outgoing Deputy CIA Director
Michael Morell said the threat of terrorism emanating from Syria is now the top
priority threat for the agency.
“It’s probably the most
important issue in the world today because of where it is currently heading,”
Morrell told the Wall Street Journal in an interview published Aug. 6.
Iran, the global threat of al
Qaeda, and North Korea are other major threats, according to Morrell.
Morrell said more foreign
fighters are fighting with al Qaeda-linked groups in Syria than those who
joined terrorists in Iraq at the height of the U.S.-led intervention there.
Syrian government weapons that
are being taken by rebels are fueling the violence in Syria, and the fighting
could spread to Lebanon, Jordan, and Iraq.
On al Qaeda, Morell said the
group has changed and its leadership degraded, and with that change the threat
of a large-scale attack on the United States has decreased. However, attacks on
U.S. diplomatic posts could take place, he said.
“If we don’t keep the pressure
on them, they will reconstitute,” he said. “I worry about complacency in the
face of that.”
The Obama administration has
agreed to provide covert aid to Syrian rebels but is concerned that the aid may
end up being used by terrorists.
The Free Syrian Army, made up
mainly of Syrian army defectors, is the main group the administration hopes to
fund.
However, other countries that
are providing aid to the rebels are not discriminating between the Islamist
rebels and the more secular Free Syrian Army.
On Saturday, Iraqi Prime
Minister Nouri al Maliki warned that weapons and fighters from Syria are also
spreading into Iraq.
“The weapons provided to those
killers in Syria have been smuggled to Iraq, and those wolves that came from
different countries to Syria are now sneaking into Iraq,” Maliki was quoted as
saying at a youth meeting.
Meanwhile, Germany’s Bild
newspaper reported Aug. 19 that al Qaeda is plotting attacks on Europe’s
high-speed rail network.
Bill Gertz, The Washington Free Beacon, August 20, 2013
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