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Greek police in Athens attempt
to disperse Muslim protesters in September 2012. Photo: Louisa
Gouliamaki/AFP/Getty Images
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The threat of experienced
militants returning to Europe from combat in North Africa and the Middle East
is fueling debate about immigration and integration in Europe and strengthening xenophobic and nationalist
sentiments. It is not a new phenomenon for Europeans to travel abroad to fight.
Reports have circulated for months about the growing number of foreigners
fighting alongside Islamists in places such as Libya and Syria. Most recently,
Spanish newspaper El Mundo reported Aug. 5 that leaks by unspecified European
intelligence services warned that terrorist organizations in Syria could be
preparing international attacks, particularly in Europe.
As new intelligence emerges --
whether the threats are legitimate or not -- European authorities will
intensify counterterrorism efforts and immigration controls in an effort to
thwart possible attacks. But given the large and growing Muslim population in
Europe and the ease of travel throughout the Continent, preventing all attacks
will not be easy.
Analysis
The El Mundo article
identified the Syrian rebel group Jaish al-Muhajireen wal Ansar (Army of
Emigrants and Helpers), formerly known as the Muhajireen Brigade, as a group
that many foreigners join. Created in summer 2012 by foreign fighters and led
by Chechens, the group has recruited foreign participants from all over the
world and merged with two other Syrian rebel factions, the Khattab Brigade and
the Army Muhammad, in February. According to the Chechen news agency Kavkaz
Center, the group consists of roughly 1,000 fighters and has led assaults in
the Syrian provinces of Aleppo, Latakia and Idlib, among others.
National Origins
In April of this year, EU
Counterterrorism Coordinator Gilles de Kerchove estimated that some 500
European citizens were fighting in Syria, most of them from the United Kingdom,
France and Ireland. A survey by the International Center for the Study of Radicalization
at King's College London found that up to 600 Europeans from 14 countries,
including Austria, Spain, Sweden, the United Kingdom and Germany, have
participated in the Syrian conflict since it began in early 2011, representing
roughly 7 to 11 percent of the total number of foreign fighters in Syria. The
study showed that the largest contingent of foreign militants -- somewhere
between 28 and 134 -- came from the United Kingdom. (The number of foreign
fighters could be higher considering that many likely cycled through the
fighting arena and returned home in a very short time.)
Though no one knows the exact
number of foreigners fighting in jihadist militant groups, reports occasionally
surface about foreigners killed in action in Syria, Somalia, Libya and Yemen,
among other countries. In March, for example, a Swedish man known by the nom de
guerre Abu Kamal As Swedee and a Danish man known as Abdul Malik al-Dinmarki,
both members of the Jaish al-Muhajireen wal Ansar, were reportedly killed in
suicide bombings in Syria.
The Washington Institute for
Near East Policy and Flashpoint Global Partners conducted a joint study this
year that monitored extremist Internet sites and analyzed the national origins
of 280 foreign fighters reported to have died fighting alongside rebels in
Syria between July 2012 and May 2013. The study found that 60 of those killed
came from Libya, 47 came from Tunisia and 44 came from Saudi Arabia. The death
toll also included single fighters from countries such as Denmark, France, Uzbekistan,
Ireland, Morocco, Turkey, the United Kingdom and the United States.
Jihadists Back Home
Muslim communities have
existed in Europe for centuries, but guest-worker agreements and relaxed
immigration policies in the 1960s brought waves of Muslim immigrants from
Turkey into Germany, from Algeria into France and from Pakistan into the United
Kingdom. EU cross-border travel restrictions are minimal, and some European
authorities try hard not to disturb Muslim communities in hopes that inaction
will safeguard Europe against attacks by radicalized Islamists. Compounding the
problem is that returning jihadist fighters are more often than not European
citizens and are usually not caught by standard immigration controls.
Hence, it has not been
difficult for European Islamists to receive support from people and groups in
the Middle East and North Africa largely undetected. Those connections can then
be used to attempt to carry out terrorist attacks inside Europe. Below are some
of the most recent attempted and successful attacks involving European
jihadists:
§ March
2013: A Belgian federal police counterterrorism force conducted a
felony car stop that led to a shootout and the death of Hakim Benladghem, a
French citizen of Algerian descent. Benladghem was known to have received
training as a paratrooper with the French Foreign Legion. Police discovered a
cache of weapons and explosives in his apartment and believed Benladghem
intended to carry out an armed assault in Europe.
§ August
2012: Spanish and French police foiled an al Qaeda plot by two Chechen
men, Eldar Magomedov and Mohamed Ankari Adamov, and a Turk named Cengiz Yalcin.
Their alleged plan was to drop improvised explosive devices from paragliders
onto British and U.S. targets in Spain, France and elsewhere in Europe during
the London Olympics. All three suspects were said to be al Qaeda operatives who
had received training in Pakistan.
§ July
2012: A Swedish national of Lebanese descent, Abu Abdurraham, plotted
to blow up a U.S. passenger jet during the London Olympics. Abdurraham was
believed to have converted to Islam in 2008 and was recruited for the operation
in a terrorist training camp in Yemen.
§ March
2012: A French-Algerian man named Mohammed Merah shot and killed a
rabbi and three children outside a Jewish school in Toulouse, France. A week
before the attack, Merah targeted a group of French paratroopers, killing
four. He reportedly targeted army personnel because of his involvement with
unknown militant groups in the war in Afghanistan.
In France and the United
Kingdom, the threat posed by radical Islamists has become an important public
issue, making both countries hesitant to supply weapons to Syrian rebels in
spite of their earlier moves to end an embargo on such support. Both countries
are also well aware that the large Muslim enclaves spreading throughout the
Continent provide attractive havens for European jihadists who have received
training in places such as Pakistan, Syria, Afghanistan, Yemen and North
Africa. These communes provide effective environments for radicalization because
of their relative isolation and the cultural and religious bonds they provide
to largely disenfranchised immigrant populations.
Since the outbreak of
instability in North Africa and extended fighting in Syria, the fear of attacks
by nationals returning to Europe after fighting abroad has become widespread.
It is a concern not only for France and the United Kingdom, both of which have
sizable Muslim populations and have already seen terrorist attacks, but also
for countries such as Denmark and Sweden, the latter of which is often
portrayed as a positive example regarding the acceptance of immigrants.
Another Look at Immigration
Policies
With border controls inside
the European Union largely abolished, radicalized Islamists can easily threaten
multiple countries, making collaboration among EU members more important. At
the beginning of August, nine EU countries, including France, Belgium, Netherlands,
Luxembourg, Germany, Poland, Italy, the United Kingdom and Sweden, called on
the EU Parliament to support the establishment of a European database of
airline passengers who enter and leave the European Union. While most EU
countries already collect such data, it is not shared because the European
Parliament is concerned about infringing upon privacy rights.
In order for EU members to
better address the threat of jihadist attacks at home, security along the
bloc's borders will likely be tightened. This will affect not only potential
terrorists but also other Muslim and European travelers. This could add pressure
on countries such as the Balkan states -- many of which are not part of the
European Union, though they border EU territory and reportedly have seen
extensive outflows of fighters to Syria -- to increase their overall security
efforts. Western European countries will probably provide aid in the form of
money, personnel and hardware to those that need it.
In many European countries,
immigrant populations are already under the spotlight because of rising
unemployment. Right-wing parties, such as the National Front in France and the
Freedom Party in the Netherlands, which are already gaining popularity in light
of the European economic crisis, will fuel the fear that European jihadists
will return from the battlefield to perpetrate attacks in Europe. This could
lead to more criticism of European Muslim communities for their lack of
integration. Rising unemployment, combined with the threat of returning
jihadists, only increases the pressure on European governments to tighten
immigration policy.
Europe's Jihadist Outlook
Despite the large number of
European Muslims who have received training overseas and fought in places such
as Somalia, Libya and Syria, few have actually conducted attacks after
returning to Europe. Still, in an era when jihadist ideologues are urging
individual jihad in the West, these trained individuals do pose a very real
threat.
One problem is that the manner
in which fighters are recruited from Europe or elsewhere is inconsistent from
one place to another and difficult to track. As a result, it is hard to
determine who might carry out a terrorist attack, what type of attack it could
be and where it might occur. This problem is compounded by many others,
including the grassroots strategy propagated by al Qaeda and the
difficulties of disrupting terrorist training that occurs abroad. Problems
specific to Europe include the historical Muslim presence in the Continent and
the relative ease of cross-border European travel. Authorities will continually
be challenged in their efforts to thwart terrorist attacks, not only in Europe
but anywhere there are vulnerable targets as well.
"European Jihadists: The Continuation of a Historical Trend is republished with
permission of Stratfor."
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