“The Taliban claimed responsibility for a complex suicide attack targeting the
home of Afghanistan’s defense minister that killed eight people and wou
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Eye on Extremism
August 5, 2021
The Wall Street Journal: Taliban Claim Attack On Afghanistan Defense
Minister’s Home
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“The Taliban claimed responsibility for a complex suicide attack targeting the
home of Afghanistan’s defense minister that killed eight people and wounded 20,
one of the most serious insurgent strikes in the Afghan capital in recent
months. Gen. Bismillah Khan Mohammadi, who took over as minister of defense
after the Taliban swept through northern Afghanistan in June, wasn’t at home
during Tuesday night’s attack. The ensuing gunbattle between Afghan special
forces and Taliban fighters rattled downtown Kabul for several hours. The
attack came as the Taliban have been pressing into provincial capitals around
the country. Though the Taliban have fought their way into some of these
cities, such as Helmand’s capital of Lashkar Gah, they have been stemmed by
heavy U.S. airstrikes and by Afghan special forces flown in as reinforcements.
The insurgents attacked the adjacent home of a member of Parliament during an
hourslong gunbattle. The explosions destroyed the facades of nearby buildings.
In a statement released Wednesday, the Taliban called the attack on Gen.
Mohammadi’s heavily fortified residence “the beginning of retaliatory
operations against the core officials of the Kabul administration.”
The National: What The Boko Haram Leader's Death Means For The War Against
Terror
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“On June 16, Boko Haram confirmed the death of its leader Abubakar Shekau.
Shekau died during clashes with the competing Islamic State for the West
African Province (Iswap) in the Sambisa Forest in north-eastern Nigeria, one of
the last regions controlled by Boko Haram. At first sight, the death of Shekau,
the mastermind behind many atrocities committed against African civilians, may
come as a relief. But it also reveals a darker reality: the steady replacement
of Boko Haram by ISIS in the Lake Chad Basin region – which includes Niger,
Nigeria, Chad and Cameroon – and its new security implications. Shekau had led
Boko Haram since 2009, the year the group’s founder Mohammed Yusuf died. The
organisation caught international attention in 2014 with the kidnapping of the
Chibok schoolgirls that shocked the world and triggered the #BringBackOurGirls
movement. But soon afterwards, Shekau and his commanders faced fierce
competition from the emerging ISIS, whose extremist doctrine and military
victories in Syria and Iraq during the same period, appealed to its combatants.
By 2015, Boko Haram was losing ground against the Nigerian armed forces,
especially after the battle of Gwoza in March that ended in a debacle for the
terrorist group.”
United States
Associated Press: Officer Dead, Suspect Killed In Violence Outside Pentagon
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“A Pentagon police officer died after being stabbed Tuesday during a burst of
violence at a transit center outside the building, and a suspect was shot by
law enforcement and died at the scene. The Pentagon, the headquarters of the
U.S. military, was temporarily placed on lockdown after a man attacked the
officer on a bus platform shortly after 10:30 a.m. The ensuing violence, which
included a volley of gunshots, resulted in “several casualties,” said Woodrow
Kusse, the chief of the Pentagon Force Protection Agency, which is responsible
for security in the facility. The deaths of the officer and the suspect were
first confirmed by officials who were not authorized to discuss the matter and
spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity. The Fairfax County
Police Department also tweeted condolences about the officer’s death. Officials
said they believe two bystanders were injured.”
Chattanooga Times Free Press: Daughter Of Chattanooga Woman Who Joined ISIS
Rescued, Awaits Fate Outside A Syrian Detention Camp
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“Aminah Mohamad, an 8-year-old girl born in Chattanooga but raised under ISIS
control, has been rescued and is in a secure location in northeast Syria more
than two years after her mother, a Chattanooga native, was killed in an
airstrike. Peter Galbraith, a 70-year-old former U.S. diplomat, told BuzzFeed
News this week that the girl was interviewed Saturday by a member of the
International Center for the Study of Violent Extremism about her life under
the control of ISIS, the Islamic State terrorist group. According to BuzzFeed,
Galbraith has worked to “repatriate foreign women and children” from detention
camps that hold tens of thousands of people linked to ISIS. Aminah's mother,
Ariel Bradley, was a Hixson-born evangelical Christian who eventually joined
ISIS. Aminah Mohamad's path back to the United States is uncertain at this
time. She has lived most of her life in a war-torn country. Both of her parents
are dead, according to Buzzfeed. One of her brothers was also killed in an
airstrike and her second brother is reportedly missing. Bradley was among the
first activists working with Chattanooga Organized for Action in 2010, a group
that pushes for racial equality, fair housing policy and empathy for the poor.”
Syria
Stars And Stripes: ISIS Remains A Persistent 'Low-Level' Threat In Iraq And
Syria, US Report Says
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“The Islamic State group remains a threat seven years after it swept through
Syria and Iraq, but it has not mounted any deliberate attacks on coalition
forces in over two years, the U.S. military said. This week marks the
anniversary of ISIS’s slaughter of some 5,500 members of the Yazidi minority in
northwestern Iraq and forced enslavement of over 6,000 others in 2014. It’s
been over two years since the terrorist group was ousted from the last of its
territorial strongholds in Iraq and Syria, but it continues to exploit
sectarian, political and security weaknesses in the region. U.S. Central
Command believes that the terrorists can likely “operate indefinitely in the
Syrian desert” at current levels, the Defense Department Inspector General’s
office said in a quarterly report to Congress published Tuesday. “ISIS
continued operating as a ‘low-level’ and ‘well-entrenched’ insurgency in rural
areas of Iraq and Syria,” said the IG report, covering the period from April to
June. Syrian Democratic Forces conduct a patrol during a joint operation with
U.S. soldiers in Syria in May 2021. Seven years after the Islamic State group
swept through parts of Syria and Iraq, ISIS it remains a threat, but hasn’t
been able to mount any deliberate attacks on coalition forces in more than two
years, the U.S. military said.”
Iraq
Politico: The Soleimani Assassination Was Supposed To Weaken Iraqi Militias.
Instead, They’re Flexing Their Muscles.
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“In Iraq’s easternmost province of Diyala near the border with Iran, thousands
of paramilitaries marched in neatly arranged columns, trailed by an imposing
procession of tanks and armored vehicles. The June parade, triumphantly
broadcast on a YouTube livestream, marked the seventh anniversary of the
Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF), an amalgamation of Iraqi paramilitary
factions originally formed to fight ISIS with Iranian support. The PMF is
technically part of the Iraqi state, but its most powerful Iranian-backed
factions often act outside the chain of command to attack their critics inside
Iraq as well as U.S. military and diplomatic facilities. To the right of the
procession towered a giant picture of the PMF’s late deputy commander Abu Mahdi
al-Mohandis, killed by a U.S. drone strike in January 2020 alongside Qassem
Soleimani, his mentor and Iran’s most powerful general. Popular Mobilization
Forces tanks pass a giant picture of the late PMF deputy commander Abu Mahdi Al
Mohandis during a parade marking the seventh anniversary of the PMF's founding,
in this screenshot from the official event livestream on YouTube. Atop a stage
to the left, Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi waved at the saluting
troops as they passed, flanked by top PMF leaders who had largely avoided
appearing with one another in public since the fateful U.S. strike.”
Afghanistan
Bloomberg: Taliban Seizes Border Posts, Draining Key Afghan Income Source
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“The Taliban has seized key customs posts and is collecting import duties on
goods entering Afghanistan, a Ministry of Finance official said, cutting off a
key revenue source for President Ashraf Ghani’s beleaguered government. The
ministry collected only 4.6 billion Afghanis ($58 million) in duties last month
compared with 7.3 billion Afghanis in June from all 30 customs posts located on
borders, cities and airports, ministry spokesman Mohammad Rafi Tabe said by
phone. Most losses were at international border crossings where the Taliban
took more than 2.7 billion Afghanis, he said. The militant group has been
making rapid advances across the country as U.S. and NATO troops head home,
with a final exit slated for Aug. 31. Over the last month they have gained
control of at least eight of 14 customs posts along Afghanistan’s borders with
Iran, Pakistan, Turkmenistan and Tajikistan, Tabe said. Import duties account
for about half of Afghanistan’s total domestic revenues, which were estimated
at about 216.5 billion Afghanis this year, Tabe said. The U.S. and other
international donors also provide around 236 billion Afghanis annually to help
the aid-dependent country finance its military expenses.”
NPR: The Taliban Say They've Changed. Experts Aren't Buying It And Fear For
Afghanistan
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“Nearly two decades after U.S. forces toppled a repressive Taliban regime, the
militant religious movement is again winning territory on battlefields across
Afghanistan, vying to fill a power vacuum left as America prepares to exit its
longest war. The prospect of a Taliban takeover reminiscent of the movement's
1996 blitz on the capital, Kabul, has people both inside and outside
Afghanistan worried about the future. While the Taliban have been making rapid
gains — particularly since U.S.-led forces began a withdrawal in May — few
experts see a complete takeover of the capital as imminent. However, the
question remains: After 20 years in the political wilderness, how would the
Taliban govern if they regained power? The short answer might be, not much
differently from the last time. “I think everyone is trying to read some pretty
sparse tea leaves here,” says Laurel Miller, the Asia program director for the
International Crisis Group. When the Taliban last held power, in 2001, their
treatment of women — who were denied education and employment and forced to
wear the all-encompassing burqa — as well as minorities, such as Afghanistan's
mostly Shiite Hazaras, earned the country pariah status in the international
community.”
Pakistan
BBC News: Article 370: Why More Locals In Kashmir Are Becoming Militants
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“Every time Bashir Ahmad Bhat's gaze falls on the blood stains on the walls,
he is reminded of the night his brother, a policeman in Indian administered
Kashmir, was murdered. It was June; Mr Bashir had been preparing to go to sleep
when he heard the sound of gun shots coming from next door. Alarmed, he sprang
out of bed to check. A heart-wrenching scene awaited him - his brother lay dead
at the entrance of his home. His wife and daughter lay next to him, bloodied
and struggling in pain. They died later. “Those bullets destroyed a garden full
of flowers in a minute,” Mr Bashir said. “What was their fault? Nothing. The
police say the family was shot by militants. Officers like Mr Bashir's brother,
Fayaz Ahmad Bhat, are often targeted in the Kashmir valley, which has long seen
militancy against local security forces. “These are the people the other side
calls police informers or collaborators,” said Ajai Sahni, the executive
director of Delhi-based defence think tank, the Institute for Conflict
Management. And their families, he added, “are always vulnerable and the first
targets”. On 5 August, 2019, India revoked nearly all of Article 370 in the
constitution, stripping Jammu and Kashmir of the autonomy it had been
guaranteed.”
Lebanon
The Washington Post: In Test For Israel’s New Government, Rockets From Lebanon
Fired Into Northern Israel
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“Sirens sent residents in northern Israel running for shelter Wednesday after
three rockets were launched from southern Lebanon, drawing rounds of
cross-border Israeli artillery fire and rare overnight strikes, escalating a
regional security situation seen as a test for Israel's new government. The
relatively small-scale operation, in which two rockets landed in open fields
near the northern Israeli city of Kiryat Shemona and another came down inside
Lebanon, was carried out by Palestinian groups along Lebanon’s southern border,
according to Israeli media. The munitions sparked blazes in both Lebanon and
Israel, where extreme heat and strong winds recently have compounded the risk
of wildfires. The incident unfolded on a day of national mourning in Lebanon to
mark one year since a huge explosion obliterated Beirut’s port, a disaster that
has come to symbolize the country’s crisis of corruption and negligence. Israel
fired more than 100 shells into Lebanon, according to Israeli media reports. It
also carried out its first airstrikes over the border in eight years, targeting
the sites from where the rockets were fired, the military said early Thursday.
The Palestinian groups have attempted similar cross-border attacks in recent
months.”
Middle East
NPR: Osama Bin Laden Biography Goes Inside Al-Qaida Leader's Final Hideout
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“As the 20th anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks approaches, a new
biography traces Osama bin Laden's path from a shy, religious teenager to the
leader of a global jihadist group dedicated to mass murder. Journalist Peter
Bergen, who met the al-Qaida leader in 1997, says that a series of events kept
pushing bin Laden “further and further down the path of radicalization.” “[Bin
Laden] could have chosen a different path at several points in his life,”
Bergen says. “But the introduction of American troops into Saudi Arabia [in
1992] turned his sort of latent anti-Americanism into a passionate hatred of
the United States.” Bergen says bin Laden thought the Sept. 11 attacks, which
he is credited with masterminding, would result in the U.S. withdrawing troops
from Saudi Arabia and other places in the Middle East. “That, of course, was a
delusion,” he adds. “It didn't work.” Bin Laden was killed in 2011 when U.S.
Navy SEALs raided his compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan. Bergen's new book, The
Rise and Fall of Osama bin Laden, draws on materials recovered from the
compound as well as on interviews with a dozen people in bin Laden's inner
circle.”
Nigeria
All Africa: Nigeria: 87 Boko Haram Fighters, Families Surrender To Troops
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“The Nigerian Army yesterday said that 87 more fighters of terrorist groups,
Boko Haram and Islamic State for West African Province (ISWAP) and their
families surrendered to troops in Borno State. The Nigerian Army said last week
that 73 insurgents and their families including women and children surrendered
to troops of 202 Battalion, who took them into custody in Ruwaza village in
Bama Local Government Area of Borno State. A war update issued by Army
Spokesman, Brigadier-General Onyema Nwachukwu, stated that in continuation of
the ongoing intensive clearance operations across the theatre of Operation
Hadin Kai (OPHK), “more Boko Haram terrorists and elements of Islamic State of
West Africa Province (ISWAP) and their families, who have hitherto hibernated
around the fringes of Sambisa forest have yielded to troops' heavy artillery
and air bombardments and surrendered to troops at Forward Operational Base
(FOB) Banki Junction/BOCOBS in Bama, Borno State on August 2, 2021”. It said
the terrorists also surrendered several assorted weapons and incendiaries,
comprising 19 male fighters, 19 adult females and 49 children from Njimia
village and environs.”
The Christian Post: At Least 7 Killed, Over 250 Houses Destroyed In Series Of
Overnight Attacks In Nigeria
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“A series of violent attacks during weekend nighttime raids in Nigeria blamed
on Fulani radicals has reportedly led to the deaths of about seven people, the
destruction of nearly 300 houses and the displacement of many. However, a
leading Fulani advocacy group has put the blame for the violence on local
youths. Suspected Fulani militants attacked villages in Nigeria’s Miango
district in the Plateau state during “unhindered and undistracted” attacks that
began Saturday night into Sunday morning, according to a statement released
Sunday by the Irigwe Development Association. According to the statement, the
violence resulted in around 100 acres of farmland being destroyed, at least 250
houses burned and mass displacement. “We are calling on government and security
agencies to come to our aid, as our people have been left homeless, their farms
destroyed and loved ones killed,” IDA Secretary-General, Comrade Danjuma
Dickson Auta, said in an interview with The Daily Post. He said these actions
have “been a recurring decimal” as the many homes and farms have been destroyed
by the “heartless people.” According to the United Kingdom-based aid agency
Barnabas Fund, the attack occurred in a “predominantly Christian area.”
United Kingdom
The Independent: Streatham Terror Attacker Claimed He No Longer Supported Isis
Days Before Knife Rampage
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“A terrorist who launched a knife attack after being released from prison told
officials he no longer supported Isis and wanted to “become a better Muslim”,
an inquest has heard. Three days before his rampage, Sudesh Amman claimed that
terrorists were “pushing people away from Islam and causing hatred”. The
20-year-old stabbed two people on Streatham High Street before being shot dead
by police on 2 February last year. He had been under police surveillance since
his release from prison 10 days earlier, and was subject to different forms of
monitoring and rehabilitation efforts. Amman was assigned two mentors as part
of the Home Office’s Desistance and Disengagement Programme, because of his
previous conviction for sharing Isis propaganda. On 30 January, he told the
mentor for practical issues that he was interested in work and employment
opportunities. A report by the mentor, known as Witness M because of an
anonymity order, said Amman asked him about the afterlife and said he should
“think about it”. “Amman said prison had taught him that talking to people
about the good of Islam was the way forward,” it added. “He said he now
realised that people who hurt other people through things like acts of terror
were pushing people away from the faith and causing hatred.”
Germany
Reuters: Germany Detains Syrian Man Suspected Of Grenade Attack On Civilians
At Refugee Camp Near Damascus
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“German police have detained a Syrian man in Berlin suspected of firing a
grenade into a crowd of civilians at a refugee camp near Damascus in 2014,
prosecutors said on Wednesday. The man, identified as Mouafak Al D., according
to German reporting custom, is accused of war crimes in Syria, fighting for a
militia on behalf of President Bashar al-Assad’s forces, the prosecutors said.
The civilians at the Palestinian refugee camp of Yarmouk, south of Damascus,
were part of a crowd waiting for food aid when a man fired at them from an
anti-tank weapon, killing seven and severely wounding three, including a
six-year-old child, the authorities said. Mouafak Al D. is suspected of being a
member of the Free Palestine Movement, an armed militia fighting on behalf of
the Syrian government, the prosecutors said. The camp, once the largest in
Syria for Palestinian refugees, was under siege by the government army and its
allied militias from 2013 until 2018 when the army recaptured it from Islamist
militants. Mouafak Al D. will appear on Wednesday before the investigating
judge of the Federal Court of Justice which will decide on his pre-trial
detention, the prosecutor added. Germany has “universal jurisdiction” laws that
allow it to prosecute people for crimes against humanity committed anywhere in
the world.”
The National: Germany Blames Covid-19 Protests For Rising Extremism
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“Germany will increase funding to tackle right-wing extremism, amid warnings
that anti-lockdown protests have increased anti-Semitism in the country.
Education Minister Anja Karliczek said conspiracy theories had gained
popularity on the fringes of the Querdenker movement, a group of self-styled
“lateral thinkers” who protested against Covid-19 restrictions. Coupled with
wider polarisation, this meant that Jewish life in Germany was “as threatened
as it has been for a long time”, she said. “The poison of anti-Semitism, the
poison of nationalism and of far-right extremism continue to take hold in our
country,” Ms Karliczek said. “We have to fight this poison with all our
determination. This fight can only be won if we pull together as a society.”
The Querdenker protests attracted an assortment of fringe figures including
anti-vaxxers, conspiracy theorists and far-right groups. Some protests have
descended into violence, while others were broken up for breaching Covid-19
restrictions. Hundreds took to the streets in Berlin last weekend despite a
court-ordered ban. Germany’s domestic intelligence service placed some of the
movement’s followers under observation over concerns of right-wing extremism.”
Canada
Vice: RCMP Arrested Toronto Man On A Terrorism Peace Bond
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“A 30-year-old Toronto man was arrested by the RCMP on a terrorism peace bond
in April and released on a number of conditions, VICE World News has learned.
The arrest comes years after he was convicted for a string of crimes including
robbing a hotel and making violent threats against staff while in jail,
according to parole documents. As part of his release in May on the pending
peace bond, Daniel Khoshnood has been ordered to abide by 16 conditions that
prohibit him from communicating with two women including a British
Columbia-based psychologist, accessing any social media platform, possessing
any electronic communication device, and possessing or viewing “any violent
extremist materials...or any listed Terrorist Entity materials.”
The court documents do not indicate a specific terrorist entity or activity,
but state Khoshnood may “participate in or contribute to … any activity of a
terrorist group…” The reasons for the fear of terrorism accusation against
Khoshnood are currently subject to a publication ban. “As this is still in the
court process, the RCMP is unable to provide specific details,” an RCMP
spokesperson told VICE World News in an email. Khoshnood’s lawyer, Paul
Scotland, told VICE World News in a phone call that “my client has instructed
me to give no comment.”
Australia
ABC News Australia: Man Arrested In Sydney, Charged With Terrorism Offences
Over Alleged Involvement In Brisbane-Based Group
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“Counter-terrorism police have charged a 39-year-old man with preparation for
foreign incursions, alleging he played a senior role in a Brisbane-based group
that maintained a desire to travel to Syria to engage in hostile activities.
The charges were brought as part of an investigation by the Queensland Joint
Counter Terrorism Team into the group. It will be alleged the Brisbane group
maintained a religiously motivated, violent extremist ideology. The 39-year-old
man was arrested in mid-July when he arrived at the Sydney International
Airport from Saudi Arabia, where he had been since 2019. He was arrested on a
Queensland warrant by members of a counter-terrorism team in New South Wales,
and underwent mandatory quarantine before being extradited to Queensland this
week. He has been charged with preparations for incursions into foreign states
for purpose of engaging in hostile activities, an offence that carries a
maximum penalty of 10 years in jail if convicted. Police will allege he was a
“founding senior figure” in an organisation involved in providing financial aid
to people who subsequently left Australia to participate in the Syrian civil
war with the group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham – a militant group opposed to Syrian
government forces.”
Technology
Washington Examiner: British Islamist Preacher Banned From Multiple Social
Media Platforms
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“British Islamist preacher Anjem Choudary has been blocked from joining
employment networking site LinkedIn, the latest decision among major social
media platforms to ban him. A LinkedIn spokesperson said the account belonging
to Choudary, who was convicted on terrorism charges in 2016 and once praised
the Sept. 11 hijackers as Muslims “carrying out their Islamic responsibility
and duty” with the attack, was taken down because the platform doesn't “allow
any terrorist organizations or violent extremist groups on our platform.” “And
we don’t allow any individuals who affiliate with such organizations or groups
to promote their activities,” the company said in a statement. “We enforce
those rules to help keep LinkedIn safe, trusted and professional. These rules
apply to everyone on LinkedIn and if they are violated, we take action.”
Choudary had already been blocked from Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram, with a
spokesperson for the latter two saying his accounts violated its Dangerous
Individuals and Organizations policies. “Under these rules, we ban
organizations or individuals that proclaim a violent mission or engage in
organized hate or violence,” the spokesperson said in a statement.”
Click here to unsubscribe.
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