From CEP's Eye on Extremism <[email protected]>
Subject Pakistan Taliban ‘Commanders’ Killed In Northwest: Pakistani Army
Date January 26, 2021 2:30 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
Pakistan’s military says it has killed five members of the Pakistan Taliban
group in two separate security operations in the northwestern North

 

 


<[link removed]>
<[link removed]>
Eye on Extremism


January 26, 2021

 

Al Jazeera: Pakistan Taliban ‘Commanders’ Killed In Northwest: Pakistani Army
<[link removed]>

 

“Pakistan’s military says it has killed five members of the Pakistan Taliban
group in two separate security operations in the northwestern North Waziristan
district, including two senior members of different factions of the armed
group. In a statement released late on Sunday, the military said it had
conducted security operations in the Mir Ali and Kaisoor areas of the district,
which was once the headquarters of the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP, or
Pakistan Taliban). “During IBOs [five] terrorists including two terrorist
commanders Syed Raheem [also known as] Abid of TTP (AKK Group) and Saifullah
Noor of TTP (Gohar Group) were killed,” said the statement. According to the
statement, Raheem had been directly involved in 17 attacks against Pakistani
security forces since 2007 and had been involved in a recent spate of targeted
killings in the district. Since last year, more than 50 people have been killed
in targeted gun and improvised explosive device (IED) attacks in North
Waziristan, according to media reports. “[Raheem] was tasked by hostile
agencies for target killing, recruiting new terrorists and organizing them,”
said the Pakistani military statement.”

 

France 24: Canada Parliament Labels US Far-Right Proud Boys Group 'A Terrorist
Entity'
<[link removed]>

 

“Canada's parliament on Monday unanimously passed a motion calling on Prime
Minister Justin Trudeau's government to designate the right-wing Proud Boys as
a banned terrorist group. The motion is purely symbolic, but the government has
said authorities are monitoring the group and collecting evidence that could
support the move. Put forward by the fourth-ranked New Democrats, the motion
states that the government should “use all of available tools to address the
proliferation of white supremacists and hate groups, starting with the
immediate designating Proud Boys as a terrorist entity.” Members of the Proud
Boys, which was started by a Canadian who has since distanced himself from the
group, were among Donald Trump supporters charged over the violent assault on
the US Capitol earlier this month. Its chairman, Enrique Tarrio, was also
arrested in Washington over the torching of a Black Lives Matter banner taken
from a church during violent protests in December. In Canada, they first made
headlines in 2017 when five navy members of the Proud Boys were disciplined for
disrupting an indigenous ceremony in Halifax. Canada lists dozens of banned
terrorist organizations including Al-Qaeda, Hezbollah, the Taliban and the
Islamic State group.”

 

United States

 

Fox News: Texas Wannabe ISIS Terrorist Pleads Guilty To Providing Materials To
Brutal Group
<[link removed]>

 

“A 22-year-old Texas man pleaded guilty Monday to providing material support
to ISIS, federal prosecutors said. Jaylyn Christopher Molina, aka Abdur Rahim,
of Cost, Texas, appeared in court in San Antonio before U.S. Magistrate Judge
Richard Farrer. Molina pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to provide
material support to ISIS and one count of receiving child pornography. The
wannabe terrorist admitted that since May 2019, he conspired with 34-year-old
South Carolina resident Kristopher Sean Matthews, aka Ali Jibreel, and others
to provide services to ISIS. These services included, among other things,
administering an encrypted chat group for ISIS supporters, collecting,
generating and disseminating pro-ISIS propaganda, attempting to recruit
individuals to join the group, and disseminating bomb-making instructions.
Molina also pleaded guilty to one count of receiving child pornography. In
September, federal authorities executing a search warrant of Molina’s home
where they seized his cell phone, which contained 18 images depicting child
pornography. If convicted, Molina faces up to 20 years in federal prison on the
conspiracy charge and up to 20 years in federal prison on the child pornography
charge. He remains in federal custody pending his sentencing.”

 

The Hill: Should US Forces Stay Or Go From Jihadi Lands?
<[link removed]>

 

“As the Biden administration addresses an old issue anew — the threat from the
hostile landscape inhabited by jihadis who continue to plot attacks on the
United States — it must decide whether to continue or affirm the Trump
administration’s retreat from Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria and Somalia. In other
words, after two decades of frustration to tame the region, has the time come
for Washington to pack up and walk out entirely? In a word, the answer turns on
the expectation of “blowback.” Translated, will exiting increase the terror
risk to the American homeland, the bedrock justification for keeping forces in
the jihadi lands?   Unfortunately, policymakers have no confident response
reflecting five uncertainties: mixed lessons from past walkouts; significant
questions about the gravity of the foreign terrorist threat to the United
States; the effectiveness of homeland security; the adequacy of native and
regional resources to attenuate risks; and the comparative merits of having
American forces offshore the landscape or onshore — mindful there are competing
demands to allocate military resources to address a rising China and to keep
Russia in tow.”

 

Syria

 

The Jerusalem Post: ISIS Terrorism Returns To Target Women In Syria - Analysis
<[link removed]>

 

“Two women have been abducted and murdered in eastern Syria. These appear to
be the latest murders carried out by ISIS against the US-backed Syrian
Democratic Forces and their civilian authorities. The women were found murdered
in the countryside of Hasakah, according to Kurdistan24, which based its report
on the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. They were both officials of the
Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria. Hind Laif al-Khadir and
Sa’da Faysal al-Hermas were the co-chairwomen of a local council. They were
kidnapped and found killed in al-Dashisha, Kurdistan24 reported. This area is
one of many that the SDF liberated from ISIS years ago. The SDF is an armed
force that defeated ISIS in Raqqa in 2017 and finally crushed the last pockets
of ISIS in March 2019. However, ISIS “sleeper cells” and networks remain
active, and there are weekly raids against the group. In recent weeks, the
jihadist group appears to have begun a resurgence, attacking Syrian regime
forces west of the Euphrates and carrying out a large twin bombing in Baghdad.
ISIS is able to operate because it does so over a large area controlled by
different groups, including the Iraqi Security Forces, the Syrian regime and
SDF. It also operates in Turkish-occupied areas of northern Syria.”

 

Agence France-Presse: Three Syrian Soldiers Killed In IS Bus Ambush
<[link removed]>

 

“Gunmen in eastern Syria ambushed a bus carrying government troops on Sunday,
killing three and wounding 10, state media said, in an attack claimed by the
Islamic State group. “Three soldiers were killed, and 10 others were wounded
after a bus came under attack by terrorist groups,” Syria’s official SANA news
agency said. The attack took place in the eastern province of Deir Ezzor, it
said. The Islamic State group claimed the attack in a statement released by its
propaganda arm via social media. “IS fighters today attacked a convoy of Syrian
army vehicles including busses carrying soldiers” west of Deir Ezzor city, it
said. The British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights also said IS was
responsible. IS overran large parts of Syria and Iraq and proclaimed a
cross-border “caliphate” in 2014, before multiple offensives in the two
countries led to its territorial defeat. The group was defeated in Syria in
March 2019, but sleeper cells continue to launch attacks. In recent months it
has ramped up attacks against Syrian regime forces, especially in the east of
the country bordering Iraq. After a series of IS bus ambushes this month,
regime forces launched a Russian-backed campaign on January 16 to secure a key
artery in east Syria, according to the Observatory.”

 

Iraq

 

Agence France-Presse: Iraq Hangs Three Convicted Of 'Terrorism': Security
Source
<[link removed]>

 

“Three Iraqis convicted of “terrorism” were hanged on Monday, a security
source said, days after a deadly double suicide attack in a crowded Baghdad
marketplace killed over 30 people. The reported hangings came after rights
groups warned Iraq may authorise a spree of such executions in a show of
strength following the bombings on Thursday, which were claimed by the Islamic
State group. “Three people convicted under Article 4 of the anti-terror law
were executed on Monday at the Nasiriyah central prison,” the security source
told AFP, on condition of anonymity. On Sunday, an official from Iraq's
presidency told AFP more than 340 execution orders “for terrorism or criminal
acts” were ready to be carried out. “We are continuing to sign off on more,”
that official said, speaking on condition of anonymity. Another official from
Iraq's presidency said Monday that all the orders were signed after 2014, most
of them under ex-president Fuad Massum and at a time when IS occupied a third
of the country. Thursday's attack, which killed at least 32 people, was a
jolting reminder of the persistent threat posed by IS, despite the government
declaring victory over the jihadists in late 2017. A 2005 law carries the death
penalty for anyone convicted of “terrorism,” which can include membership of an
extremist group even if they are not convicted of any specific acts.”

 

Turkey

 

Al Monitor: Turkey Faces Mysterious Jihadi Enemies In Idlib
<[link removed]>

 

“Obscure jihadist groups have stepped up attacks on Turkish forces in Syria’s
rebel-held province of Idlib, adding to Turkey’s dilemmas amid the fragile
status quo in the region.  Al-Qaeda-inspired groups such as Hurras al-Din stood
out as potential troublemakers when Turkish forces began to reinforce their
presence around the key M4 highway last year, coordinating with Hayat Tahrir
al-Sham (HTS), the dominant rebel group in Idlib. Caucasian fighters,
concentrated in Jisr al-Shughur and the Latakia countryside, were not seen as
an immediate threat, though they share the jihadi ideology. The attacks on the
Turkish forces, however, have come from unexpected assailants. A group calling
itself the Khattab al-Shishani Brigade claimed the first three attacks, which
targeted Turkish-Russian patrols along the M4 on July 14, July 17 and Aug. 25.
“Shishani” means “Chechen” in Arabic and has become the hallmark of Chechen-led
groups in Syria. After the July 14 car bomb attack, Russia said three of its
soldiers were injured, while Turkey spoke only of damage to vehicles. A
statement from the assailants, meanwhile, slammed the major jihadi groups in
the region for inaction against the Turkish-Russian patrols. It contained
quotes from al-Qaeda founder Osama bin Laden and referred to Russian soldiers
as “crusaders” and Turkish forces and HTS as “apostates.”

 

Daily Sabah: 5 Terrorists Surrender To Turkish Security Forces
<[link removed]>

 

“Turkish security forces convinced five terrorists to lay down their arms and
surrender, the Interior Ministry announced late Sunday. According to a
statement by the ministry, four PKK and one far-left terrorist were persuaded
into surrendering to Turkish forces in a coordinated effort between police and
gendarmerie forces. The terrorists joined the terror groups at different times
between 1993 and 2015 and were active in Syria and Iraq, the statement noted.
The number of PKK terrorists who have surrendered through persuasion this year
has reached 14, it added. Separately, a member of the PKK's Syrian branch, the
YPG, was being held in the town of Al-Bab in northern Syria on Sunday, an
official statement said. Local security forces continue their efforts to expose
the terrorist group's activities, the governor's office in southeastern
Turkey's southeastern Gaziantep province said. The terrorist, identified by the
initials A.E.M., was rounded up in Al-Bab in an operation by local security
units and the governorship, which provides the Syrian town with consultancy
services. Al-Bab was previously ruled by Daesh terrorists who destroyed its
infrastructure and displaced thousands of civilians. It is now a fully
functioning town with a local council, schools, hospitals and a university
thanks to Turkey's efforts.”

 

Afghanistan

 

Long War Journal: Al Qaeda ‘Gaining Strength’ In Afghanistan, U.S. Treasury
Says
<[link removed]>

 

“Earlier this month, the U.S. Treasury Department posted a written update on
its work to combat illicit terrorism financing. The summary was submitted in
response to inquiries from the Department of Defense’s Lead Inspector General.
Written in a question and answer format, the Jan. 4 memo provides a window into
how Treasury’s counterterrorism officials currently view al Qaeda and the
Islamic State’s competing networks. Much of the document cannot be
independently corroborated, as the source information has not been made public.
The Trump administration sold its Feb. 29, 2020, agreement with the Taliban as
a victory for America’s counterterrorism efforts. Despite supposed assurances
that the Taliban would break with al Qaeda, however, the Treasury Department’s
analysts find that the two remain closely allied. As of 2020, according to the
report, al Qaeda was “gaining strength in Afghanistan while continuing to
operate with the Taliban under the Taliban’s protection.” Al Qaeda “capitalizes
on its relationship with the Taliban through its network of mentors and
advisers who are embedded with the Taliban, providing advice, guidance, and
financial support.” To date, there is no publicly available evidence showing
that the Taliban has taken steps to uproot al Qaeda’s network inside
Afghanistan.”

 

Stars And Stripes: Taliban Prisoners Released Under Peace Deal Arrested After
Rejoining Fight, Official Says
<[link removed]>

 

“Hundreds of Taliban prisoners released under last year’s U.S.-Taliban peace
deal have been arrested after returning to the battlefield, a top Afghan
security official said. The Afghan military expects the insurgents to intensify
attacks as the year progresses, National Security Adviser Hamdullah Mohib also
told reporters Sunday. “We have recaptured 600 of the freed individuals because
they were fighting alongside the Taliban even though they promised they would
not fight again,” Mohib said. Other released prisoners were involved in making
car bombs and planning attacks on security forces, Mohib said, citing
intelligence reports. Over 5,000 Taliban prisoners were released last year in
exchange for 1,000 Afghan security force personnel captured by the guerrillas.
The prisoner exchange, which was a part of the U.S.-Taliban deal struck last
February, was a precursor for the ongoing peace talks between the insurgents
and the Afghan government. The Kabul government — which did not participate in
talks leading up to the agreement — was initially hesitant to free the
prisoners, but eventually bowed to pressure from Washington. Many in
Afghanistan criticized the move, saying it could worsen the security situation.”

 

Yemen

 

Al Jazeera: US Allows Transactions With Houthis As ‘Terrorist’ Label Reviewed
<[link removed]>

 

“The United States has temporarily stayed a ban on transactions involving
Yemen’s Houthi movement as it reviews a decision by former President Donald
Trump’s administration to designate the Iran-aligned group as a “foreign
terrorist organisation”. The announcement on Monday permits all transactions
involving the Houthis, who are involved in a years-long conflict in Yemen
against a military coalition led by Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates,
until February 26. It comes a day after 22 aid organisations working in the
war-torn country called on the US to lift the “terrorist” designation about
concerns it would exacerbate a continuing humanitarian crisis and risk plunging
the country into widespread famine. US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced
the Houthi designation on January 19, a day before President Joe Biden took
office. The measure froze any US-related assets of the Houthis, banned
Americans from doing business with them and made it a crime to provide support
or resources to the movement. The Biden administration has promised to review
the designation, however, amid widespread criticism from aid groups and US
lawmakers, including the chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, who
said it “endangers the lives of the Yemeni people.”

 

Africa

 

The Nation: Kenya: KDF Guns Down Terror Suspect, Injures Dozens
<[link removed]>

 

“Security forces have shot dead a suspected terrorist and injured several
others as the government turns the screws on Somalia-based militant group
Al-Shabaab. Special Operation Group (SOG), which is undertaking an operation in
Banisa and Mandera North, gunned down the suspect and injured several others,
according to a security brief. “SOG team, which was conducting patrol
operations at Ashabito, received information on the presence of Al-Shabaab
militants in Ali Wol dam, about 14 kilometres north of Ashabito. The team
responded immediately, where they encountered a group of five militants,” reads
the report. The team gunned down one militant and recovered an AK-47 rifle,
money and a hand set radio. The SOG team drawn from the Kenya Defence Forces
(KDF) spent the better part of yesterday tracking down other terrorists
believed to have escaped with gunshot wounds. “We're firmly on the ground and a
lot is happening, including flashing out the enemy. We shall continue with our
operation,” said Mandera County Commissioner Onesmus Kyatha. Senior security
officers in Mandera are upbeat on winning the war the Al-Qaeda-linked terrorist
group, which has successfully carried out attacks in the region in the past one
month, is waging.”

 

United Kingdom

 

BBC News: Isis: From Cardiff To The Caliphate
<[link removed]>

 

“In 2013, Nasser Muthana and Reyaad Khan left their lives in Cardiff to fight
for Islamic State in Syria.Three months later Nasser's younger brother Aseel
also went out to join them. I went to sixth form college with both Nasser and
Reyaad, and Aseel had gone to my school. I recently travelled to Syria for BBC
Panorama to try and speak to Aseel and to find out why they left Cardiff to
join such a brutal organisation. Aseel was pleased to see me. He's spent two
years in a crowded cell in north-east Syria. He is being held by the Kurdish
forces who captured Islamic State group members at the last bloody battle of
Baghuz. I wanted to know what made Aseel go from selling ice creams in Cardiff
Bay to joining Islamic State.He said he had been attracted to Syria by the
revolution and civil war there. “People being killed and, you know, children
dying, barrel bombs… The regime, what they were doing to the people.” Nearly
900 people from Britain went to join Islamic State. Many of them were recruited
after watching online videos and reading messages appealing to a sense of
empathy towards the suffering Syrian people. I wanted to know what Aseel did
when he arrived to alleviate the suffering of Syrians. He couldn't answer me -
because he had no answer.”

 

Germany

 

Agence France-Presse: Germany's Far-Right AfD Braces For Surveillance
<[link removed]>

 

“Germany's domestic security agency is on the verge of announcing whether the
far-right AfD will be placed under surveillance for posing a threat to
democracy, dealing a potential blow to the anti-immigration party in a key
election year. After a two-year investigation and a report totalling over 1,000
pages, the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BfV) is to
decide in the coming days if the Alternative for Germany (AfD) will be classed
as a “suspected case” over its ties to right-wing extremism. The classification
would allow intelligence agents to shadow the party, tap its communications and
possibly use undercover informants. The anti-Islam, anti-immigration AfD has
often courted controversy by calling for Germany to stop atoning for its World
War II crimes. Senior figure Alexander Gauland once described the Nazi era as
just “a speck of bird poo” on German history. The BfV's decision comes at a
sensitive time for the AfD. While it is the largest opposition party in
parliament, it has seen its ratings fall as the pandemic has kept the spotlight
firmly on Chancellor Angela Merkel's ruling coalition parties.”

 

Southeast Asia

 

Jakarta Globe: Five Men Arrested In Aceh Over Alleged Links With IS
<[link removed]>

 

“The Aceh Provincial Police have arrested five men, including a local civil
servant, for alleged role in a series of terror attacks and suspected link with
global terror network the Islamic State, a spokesman said on Monday. The
suspects are part of the home-grown militant group that carried out suicide
bombing at a parking lot in the Medan Metropolitan Police headquarters, North
Sumatra, on Nov. 13, 2019, Aceh Police spokesman Chief Comr. Winardy said. They
were arrested in separate raids on Wednesday and Thursday, he said. “One of the
suspects identified by initials S.J. is an employee of the East Aceh district
government,” Winardy said over telephone. He said the suspects have managed to
blend in with the community by living ordinary lives -- two of them work as
construction workers, one sells fruit and another owns a café. They were
arrested during separate raids in provincial capital Banda Aceh, Langsa and
Aceh Besar. Authorities have blamed shadowy terror group Jemaah Ansharut Daulah
for the November 2019 bombing that killed the sole bomber identified as Rabbial
Muslim Nasution and injured six people. When carrying out the attack, Rabbial
wore the familiar jacket of a ride-hailing company to get through the police
compound's check point.”

 

Technology

 

Axios: Tech Digs In For Long Domestic Terror Fight
<[link removed]>

 

“With domestic extremist networks scrambling to regroup online, experts fear
the next attack could come from a radicalized individual — much harder than
coordinated mass events for law enforcement and platforms to detect or deter.
The big picture: Companies like Facebook and Twitter stepped up enforcement and
their conversations with law enforcement ahead of Inauguration Day. But they'll
be tested as the threat rises that impatient lone-wolf attackers will lash out.
Where it stands: “Without any apparent large scale event in the immediate
future, there is always a risk that radicalized individuals may feel themselves
compelled to act out,” said Jared Holt, a visiting research fellow with the
Atlantic Council. What they're saying: Twitter says it's working closely with
the FBI and Department of Homeland Security to minimize potential risks,
including those specifically relating to planned future demonstrations from
white nationalists and other extremist groups across the country. “These
relationships are longstanding and go beyond any one event,” a Twitter
spokesperson told Axios. Facebook and YouTube also said they continue to work
with law enforcement.”



Click here to unsubscribe.
<[link removed]>
 
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis

  • Sender: Counter Extremism Project
  • Political Party: n/a
  • Country: n/a
  • State/Locality: n/a
  • Office: n/a
  • Email Providers:
    • Iterable