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Observer: Terror cells regroup - and now their target is Europe



 
 
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Old January 11th, 2004, 09:58 PM
Tam
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Default Observer: Terror cells regroup - and now their target is Europe

Terror cells regroup - and now their target is Europe

Secret intelligence papers from across the continent reveal a growing danger
from a widening network of fanatics - and this is a struggle the West cannot
lose

Antony Barnett, Jason Burke and Zoe Smith
Sunday January 11, 2004
The Observer (London)

They had been watching him for months, aware that his pop star good looks
concealed a secret life as one of Europe's new terrorist kingpins. Finally,
on a cold winter dawn, the police moved in. Abderrazak Mahdjoub did not
resist as armed German officers surrounded his Hamburg home and led him
away.

For at least a year, investigators claim, the 30-year-old Algerian had been
a key part of a network of Islamic militants dedicated to recruiting and
dispatching suicide bombers to the Middle East. Several volunteers had got
through, wreaking havoc in a series of attacks in Iraq. Many more were on
their way, along with bombers focused on targets in Europe.

Even worse, his associates were planning bombs in Western Europe. At least
two European intelligence services had made previous attempts to take
Mahdjoub out. Now, finally, it was the Germans' turn. This weekend, just
over a month after his arrest, Mahdjoub remains in prison at an undisclosed
location. He is likely to remain incarcerated for some time.

Mahdjoub's arrest was a minor victory in a major war being fought, bitterly
and secretly, in cities from London to Warsaw, from Madrid to Oslo. It pits
the best investigative officers in Europe against a fanatical network of men
dedicated to the prosecution of jihad both in Europe and overseas. It is a
war security officials know they cannot afford to lose - and that they know
they will be fighting for the foreseeable future.

Previously seen as a relative backwater in the war on terror, Europe is now
in the frontline. 'It's trench warfare,' said one security expert. 'We keep
taking them out. They keep coming at us. And every time they are coming at
us harder.'

An investigation by The Observer has revealed the extent of the new networks
that Islamic militants have been able to build in Europe since 11 September
- despite the massive effort against them. The militants' operations go far
beyond the few individuals' activities that sparked massive security alerts
over Christmas and the new year. Interviews with senior counter-intelligence
officials, secret recordings of conversations between militants and
classified intelligence briefings have shown that militants have been able
to reconstitute, and even enlarge, their operations in Europe in the past
two years. The intelligence seen by The Observer reveals that:

· Britain is still playing a central logistical role for the militants, with
extremists, including the alleged mastermind of last year's bombings in
Morocco, and a leader of an al-Qaeda cell, regularly using the UK as a place
to hide. Other radical activists are using Britain for fundraising, massive
credit card fraud, the manufacture of false documents and planning.
Recruitment is also continuing. In one bugged conversation, a senior
militant describes London as 'the nerve centre' and says that his group has
'Albanians, Swiss [and] British' recruits. He needs people who are
'intelligent and highly educated', he says and implies that the UK can, and
does, supply them.

· Islamic terror cells are spreading eastwards into Poland, Bulgaria,
Romania and the Czech Republic for the first time, prompting fears of a new
battleground in countries with weak authorities, powerful criminal gangs and
endemic corruption in the years to come.

· Austria has become a central communications hub for Muslim extremists;
France has become a key recruiting ground for fighters in Chechnya; and
German groups, who often have extensive international links, are developing
contacts with Balkan mafia gangs to acquire weapons.

The investigation has also revealed that, despite moves by the government
there to crack down, Saudi Arabia remains the key source of funds for
al-Qaeda and related militant groups.

Investigators stress that most of the European cells are autonomous, coming
together on an ad hoc basis to complete specific tasks. To describe them as
'al-Qaeda' is simplistic. Instead, sources say, the man most of these new
Islamic terror networks look to for direction is Abu Musab Zarqawi, a
Jordanian Islamic militant who some analysts believe was behind the recent
Istanbul suicide bombings against British targets and synagogues. Though he
follows a similar agenda to Osama bin Laden, the 37-year-old Zarqawi has
always maintained his independence from the Saudi-born fugitive. Last week,
his developing stature in global Islamic militancy was reinforced when he
issued his first-ever public statement, an audiotape calling on God to 'kill
the Arab and the foreign tyrants, one after another'.

Zarqawi is believed to be in Iran or Iraq. However European investigators
have discovered that one of his key lieutenants is an Iraqi Kurd known only
as Fouad, a cleric based in Syria, who handles the volunteer suicide bombers
sent from Europe to launch attacks in Iraq.

Italian investigators made the first breakthrough in the hunt for Zarqawi's
operatives. Just after 10pm on the evening of 15 June, 2002, an unidentified
Arab visitor from Germany - believed to be a senior figure in the militants'
network - arrived at a mosque in the Via Quaranta, Milan. He began by
warning the mosque's Egyptian imam, Abu Omar, about increased surveillance.
He was unaware that Italian police were listening to his every word.

Transcripts obtained by The Observer reveal that the visitor spoke of a
project needing 'intelligent and highly educated people'. Already, the
visitor said, that 'where the jihad part is concerned there was a battalion
of 25 to 26 units'. It is these 'units', believed by investigators to mean
potential suicide bombers, that the authorities knew they had to find.

The visitor then began a review of recent developments. He stressed that
'the thread begins in Saudi Arabia', where the bulk of funds apparently
still comes from. 'Don't ever worry about money, because Saudi Arabia's
money is your money,' the visitor says. He then refers to recent
'confidential' meetings in Eastern Europe with Islamic militant leaders.

'Now Europe is controlled via air and land, but in Poland and Bulgaria and
countries that aren't part of the European Community everything is easy,' he
says. 'First of all they are corrupt, you can buy them with
dollars...[Secondly] they are less-controlled countries, there aren't too
many eyes.'

The man named Austria as a launch pad for attacks. 'The country from which
everything takes off is Austria. There I met all of the sheikhs and all our
brothers are there ... it has become the country of international
communications. It has become the country of contacts.'

Poland is a particularly important location too, the man says and names a
'Sheikh Abd al-Aziz', before boasting: 'His organisation is stunning.'

After translating the conversation, held in Arabic, Italian investigators
immediately relayed the information to counterparts elsewhere in Europe. The
British security services swung into action. The transcripts also reveal the
continuing importance of London.

'The nerve centre is still London,' the man says and hints that there are
many recruits from the UK: 'We have Albanians, Swiss [and] British.'

The role of the UK was reinforced when, last April, 29-year-old Somali-born
Cabdullah Ciise was arrested in Milan days after arriving from London, where
he had fled to escape Italian investigators months earlier. The Italians
suspect him of financing a terror cell involved in the car bomb attack on
Israeli tourists in Mombasa, Kenya in November 2002. According to Italian
court documents, Ciise transferred money from Great Britain to Somalia
through Dubai.

He is also accused of being an important member of Zarqawi's international
terrorist organisation. A year earlier, in May 2002, Faraj Farj Hassan, the
suspected leader of an Islamic terrorist cell in Milan, was arrested in
Harrow, west London, where he had taken refuge with a relative who had
political asylum. Hassan, 23, was arrested for immigration offences and is
believed to still be held in Belmarsh high security prison awaiting
extradition to Italy.

And last November, an Algerian-born British national from west London was
arrested after travelling to Poland. He was the subject of an Algerian
arrest warrant alleging his involvement in a terrorist group.

When the Italians arrested Ciise they put him in the same cell as another
Islamic radical known as 'Mera'i'. Again, the conversation was bugged; it
gives a chilling insight into the mind of a hardened militant.

Mera'i tells Ciise that he hates their jailers: 'They like life, I want to
be a martyr, I live for jihad. In this life there is nothing, life is
afterward, the indescribable sensation of dying a martyr.'

Then the pair talk about the Syrian-based cleric Fouad, whom they describe
as the 'gatekeeper' to Iraq. Other transcripts reveal conversations between
Fouad and Mera'i about how they had organised the flow of 'brothers' to Iraq
via the Syrian cities of Damascus and Aleppo. British suicide bombers who
died in Israel last year travelled through both cities. One of the network's
recruits is believed to have been involved in the rocket attack in October
against the Baghdad hotel where Paul Wolfowitz, the American deputy
Secretary of Defence, was staying. One phone call between the two reveals
Mera'i telling Fouad that: 'This week more guests will be arriving ... they
are good people.' Fouad replies: 'I want those that are awake and prepared
.... I want those who will strike the earth and make iron rise out of it ...
I'm looking for those that were in Japan [ie, kamikaze or suicide bombers].'

The Italian investigation yielded important intelligence and the focus
shifted to Germany. After 11 September, authorities there had concentrated
on rounding up all those connected with the 'Hamburg cell' who had led the
attacks on New York and Washington. Soon, however, they came across a group
known as 'al-Tauhid' (the unitarians) which posed as grave a threat.
Al-Tauhid were loyal to Zarqawi; indeed, many of their key personnel had
trained in his camp in Afghanistan in the late 1990s.

According to an intelligence dossier compiled last year by German criminal
intelligence, the link between the Italian network and the German cells was
a 30-year-old Palestinian called Mansour Thaer. Another connection was a
Turk called Mevluet Tar, a 23-year-old who spoke fluent German. Both were
quickly picked up.

The dossier lists a dozen senior al-Tauhid operatives in Germany. Most were
involved in the provision of false passports or spent their time raising and
transferring funds to fighters in the Middle East. But others, many still at
large, were involved in plotting bomb attacks against Jewish targets in
Western Europe. At least one militant liaised with Albanian mafia gangs in a
bid to obtain weapons, the dossier reveals. Only a handful of the
individuals named in the document have been arrested.

Last week there were more arrests. In Paris a group alleged to be recruiting
fighters for the war in Chechnya was picked up. In Switzerland a series of
raids broke up an alleged support and fundraising network which had
connections to the men who set off bombs in Riyadh last May. In Spain, a
favoured entry point into Europe for North African militants, investigators
continue to chase down terrorists linked to cells rounded up earlier.

A Moroccan cleric called Mohammed al-Garbuzi, whom local authorities claim
was a key figure in the Casablanca bombings last May, is believed to be at
large in the UK. Scotland Yard last week warned leaders of the Jewish
community that the threat 'remained high'. Senior British police officers
said they are aware that millions of pounds are being raised in the UK by
credit card fraud for Islamic militant groups.

'We act when we can,' said one police source. 'But we are stretched enough
going after the clear and immediate threats, let alone their back-up.'

Security experts stress that the campaign to prevent another major bomb
attack in Western Europe has got no easier since major round-ups after 11
September. 'We are dealing with something that is organic, not mechanical,'
one told The Observer . 'You can't remove a part and watch it all break
down. It's more like fungus. Burn some away and it just keeps growing
somewhere else.'


The targets, the death toll and the suspects

Istanbul November 2003, 62 dead
Target: British consulate and bank, synagogues
Suspect: Local Islamic group thought to be linked to al-Qaeda or Abu Musab
Zarqawi
Baghdad August-October 2003, 50 dead
Target: Al-Rasheed hotel, UN and Red Cross headquarters.
Suspect: European suicide bombers believed to have been recruited by Mullah
Fouad in Syria.
Casablanca May 2003, 41 dead
Target: Jewish community centre and Spanish social club
Suspect: Local Islamic group. The authorities want to interview a Moroccan
cleric, Mohammed al-Garbuzi, who is believed to be in Britain.
Riyadh May 2003, 34 dead
Target: Luxury compounds in Saudi capital
Suspect: Swiss arrest an eight-strong 'logistics cell'.
Mombasa November 2002, 16 dead
Target: Israeli tourists at Paradise hotel
Suspect: Kenyan Islamic cell. Some funds allegedly provided by a Somali-born
militant living in London, arrested in Milan and 'a part of Zarqawi's cell'.



http://observer.guardian.co.uk/waron...120658,00.html

 




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