From CEP's Eye on Extremism <[email protected]>
Subject White House Tightens Rules On Counterterrorism Drone Strikes
Date October 11, 2022 1:30 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.
“President Biden has signed a classified policy limiting counterterrorism drone
strikes outside conventional war zones, tightening rules that President Donald
J. Trump had loosened for a 21st-century method of warfare, according to
officials. The policy, which the White House sent to the Pentagon and the
C.I.A. on Friday, institutionalizes a version of temporary limits that Mr.
Biden’s team quietly put in place on the day of his inauguration as a stopgap
for reducing risks to civilians while the new administration reviewed the
counterterrorism policies it had inherited from Mr. Trump. A description of the
policy, along with a classified new counterterrorism strategy memo Mr. Biden
has also signed, suggests that amid competing priorities in a turbulent world,
the United States intends to launch fewer drone strikes and commando raids away
from recognized war zones than it has in the recent past. The policy requires
Mr. Biden’s approval before a suspected terrorist is added to a list of those
who can be targeted for “direct action,” in a return to a more centralized
control of decisions about targeted killing operations that was a hallmark of
President Barack Obama’s second term. Mr. Trump had given commanders in the
field greater latitude to decide whom to target.”











<[link removed]>
<[link removed]>



Eye on Extremism


October 11, 2022



The New York Times: White House Tightens Rules On Counterterrorism Drone
Strikes
<[link removed]>



“President Biden has signed a classified policy limiting counterterrorism
drone strikes outside conventional war zones, tightening rules that President
Donald J. Trump had loosened for a 21st-century method of warfare, according to
officials. The policy, which the White House sent to the Pentagon and the
C.I.A. on Friday, institutionalizes a version of temporary limits that Mr.
Biden’s team quietly put in place on the day of his inauguration as a stopgap
for reducing risks to civilians while the new administration reviewed the
counterterrorism policies it had inherited from Mr. Trump. A description of the
policy, along with a classified new counterterrorism strategy memo Mr. Biden
has also signed, suggests that amid competing priorities in a turbulent world,
the United States intends to launch fewer drone strikes and commando raids away
from recognized war zones than it has in the recent past. The policy requires
Mr. Biden’s approval before a suspected terrorist is added to a list of those
who can be targeted for “direct action,” in a return to a more centralized
control of decisions about targeted killing operations that was a hallmark of
President Barack Obama’s second term. Mr. Trump had given commanders in the
field greater latitude to decide whom to target.”



CNN: First On CNN: Top US Officials Hold First In-Person Meeting With The
Taliban Since The US Killed Al Qaeda’s Leader In July
<[link removed]>



“Top Biden administration officials met in-person with the Taliban on
Saturday for the first time since al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri was killed
by the US in his apartment in Kabul in late July, two officials familiar with
the talks said. The administration sent the CIA’s deputy director and the top
State Department official responsible for Afghanistan to the Qatari capital of
Doha for the talks with the Taliban delegation which included their head of
intelligence, Abdul Haq Wasiq. After Zawahiri was killed in a strike, the US
accused the Taliban of a “clear and blatant violation of the Doha agreement,
“brokered by the Trump administration, which said that the Taliban would not
harbor terrorists if US forces withdrew from Afghanistan, which they did in
August 2021. After a US drone fired fatal Hellfire missiles at Zawahiri,
American officials accused Taliban leaders from the Haqqani network of knowing
about Zawahiri’s whereabouts while the Taliban angrily condemned the operation.
Since then, the US has continued to engage with the Taliban, including
negotiating the release of US citizen Mark Frerichs. But senior officials had
not met face-to-face since a few days before Zawahiri was killed on July 31.
The presence of CIA Deputy Director David Cohen and the Taliban’s Wasiq at the
meeting on Saturday indicates an emphasis on counterterrorism.”



United States



York Daily Record: What Happened To Pennsylvania's Shaun Winkler And The
Neo-Nazi Movement?
<[link removed]>



“…One of those groups – the Patriot Front – held a fundraiser in July in
Western Pennsylvania and donated to a food pantry in Allentown in May,
according to Josh Lipowsky, senior research analyst for the Counter Extremism
Project at the Anti-Defamation League. Philanthropy isn’t the mission of the
Patriot Front or other groups like it; white separatism is. What it’s leading
to, according to experts, is extreme violence by lone individuals, like the
mass murder of Jews at the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh four years ago
and the mass shooting this year at a Buffalo grocery store, targeting Black
people. In March 2021, this assessment came from the Office for the Director of
National Intelligence: Racially/ethnically motivated violent extremist groups
are “the most lethal” domestic violent extremist threats to the United States
and racially/ethnically motivated extremists are “most likely to conduct
mass-casualty attacks against civilians.” The George Washington University
Program on Extremism in May 2021 said this: “Individuals inspired by RMVE
(racially/ethnically motivated violent extremist) ideologies launched their own
string of horrific attacks during this five-year period (2014-2019), most
infamously in the form of mass shootings in Charleston, South Carolina,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Poway, California, and El Paso, Texas as well as
during a riot in Charlottesville, Virginia.”



Syria



Voice Of America: Syria Official: US Drone Attack Kills IS Member In Northeast
<[link removed]>



“A U.S.-led coalition drone strike Monday in northeastern Syria killed an
Islamic State group militant, a Kurdish-Syrian security official said. Speaking
on condition of anonymity in line with regulations, the official told The
Associated Press that the strike targeted the IS member driving a motorcycle in
the village of Hamam al-Turkman. The village is controlled by Turkish-backed
Syrian opposition forces near Tel Abyad. No other casualties were reported.
Photos from local media surfaced on social media showing what is reportedly the
remains of the militant's body next to the destroyed motorcycle. U.S. Central
Command did not immediately issue a statement on the drone attack and did not
immediately respond to an inquiry by The Associated Press on the matter. The
U.S. last week announced it killed three IS leaders in two separate operations,
including a rare ground raid in a part of northeast Syria under government
control. There are some 900 U.S. forces in Syria supporting Kurdish-led Syrian
Democratic Forces in the fight against the Islamic State group. They have
frequently targeted IS militants mostly in parts of northeastern Syria under
Kurdish control. Despite their defeat in Syria in 2019, when IS lost the last
sliver of land its fighters once controlled, the extremists' sleeper cells have
continued to carry out deadly attacks in Syria and Iraq.”



Iran



The National: Canada's Deputy PM Calls IRGC A ‘Terrorist Organisation’ As
Travel Bans Unveiled
<[link removed]>



“A top Canadian official on Friday declared Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary
Guard Corps a terrorist organisation, as she unveiled sweeping travel sanctions
on the group's members. “The IRGC leadership are terrorists, the IRGC is a
terrorist organisation,” Canadian Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance
Chrystia Freeland said. Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said the federal
government will be imposing immigration restrictions on the Iranian regime.
About half of the organisation's members — some 10,000 people — “will be
inadmissible to Canada forever”, he said. “We will be pursuing a listing of the
Iranian regime, including the IRGC leadership, under the most powerful
provision of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act,” Mr Trudeau said. He
added that the decision was permanent. The US listed the IRGC as a terrorist
organisation in 2019 under Donald Trump. President Joe Biden's administration
has declined Tehran's request to delist the force as a condition of reviving
the nuclear deal. The Canadian government's move falls short, however, of a
terrorist designation. Instead, the government is using provisions under the
Immigration and Refugee Protection Act (Irpa) to target members of the regime
and the IRGC, the CBC reported.”



Iraq



AFP: Car Explosion In Northern Iraq Kills One, Injures Four Others
<[link removed]>



“One person was killed and four others, two women and two children, were
injured when a bomb exploded Friday in the capital of Iraq’s autonomous
Kurdistan region, counter-terrorism forces said. “An explosive device planted
in a car detonated, leading to the death of the driver and the injury of... two
women and two children,” a statement said, without elaborating on the victims’
identities or a motive for the attack. The driver who was killed was an officer
in the Kurdish counter-terrorism services in the city of Sulaimaniyah,
southeast of the Kurdish capital Irbil, a security official told AFP on
condition of anonymity. The Kurdistan region in northern Iraq has long been
viewed as a haven of stability in the war-ravaged country, but it has not been
completely spared from attacks and strikes from neighboring states. The
autonomous region is home to several international NGOs and has developed its
infrastructure and projects at a faster pace than the rest of Iraq. But it has
often been caught in the crosshairs of geopolitical conflict among neighboring
countries, having recently been the target of strikes by both Iran and Turkey.
On September 28, Iran targeted positions of Iranian-Kurdish rebel groups in
Iraqi Kurdistan, killing 14 people and wounding 58, including civilians.”



Turkey



Al Monitor: Seven Years On, Questions Linger Over Deadliest Terror Attack In
Turkey
<[link removed]>



“Turkey on Monday marked the seventh anniversary of the bloodiest terrorist
attack in its history, but many of the Islamic State (IS) suspects charged over
the bombing that killed 103 people in Ankara have yet to be brought to justice.
Sixteen suspects accused of organizing the attack and leading IS activities in
Turkey remain on the run, as lawyers for the victims' families blame neglect of
duty on the part of the authorities for the failure to hunt down the fugitives
and prevent the attack in the first place. Two suicide bombers — both Turkish
nationals who spent time with IS in Syria — blew themselves up in a crowd
converging on the capital’s main train station in Ankara on Oct. 10, 2015, at a
rally for a peaceful settlement to the Kurdish conflict. In addition to the 103
dead, nearly 500 people were injured. In a statement on the eve of the
anniversary, the October 10 Lawyers Commission — a group formed by attorneys
involved in the case — accused the state of “not lifting a finger” to punish
those involved in the attack. “Our requests to the courts have been [routinely]
denied. The required measures are not being taken to capture the fugitive
suspects. Prosecutors have failed to act on our criminal complaints against IS
members who are not suspects in the case but whose role in the massacre has
become evident.”



Afghanistan



The Jerusalem Post: Afghan Special Forces Arrest Terrorist IS-KP Finance Head
<[link removed]>



“A senior Afghan intelligence official announced Wednesday that the chief of
financial affairs for Islamic State – Khorasan Province (IS-KP), an affiliate
of the Islamic State terrorist group that is active across South and Central
Asia, had been arrested by Afghan special forces in a remote area of the
country. The official told The Media Line that Abdul Malik (aka “Maliki”) was
responsible for collecting funds from Germany, Ukraine, and Spain to distribute
among IS-KP terrorists. He said that Maliki was responsible for recent
terrorist attacks in the country, as well as motivating, recruiting, and
training newly inducted youth. Taliban sources described the arrest of Maliki
as a major success against the terrorist group. Abdul Rehman Samangani, another
Afghan official, told The Media Line, “During his investigation, Maliki
revealed that his mission was to motivate foreign Muslim youth to join IS-KP,
and he collected financial contributions for IS-KP, especially from Ukraine,
Germany, and Spain.” Maliki told the investigators that he collected $15,000
from Ukraine, €5,000 from Germany, and €1,500 from Spain for the group. “We
have achieved this success without any external support,” Samangani told The
Media Line. “The operatives of the Afghan Special Intelligence Unit had been
searching for Maliki for a long time. As soon as his identity was confirmed,
our strike force apprehended him without any resistance.”



Middle East



Associated Press: Israeli Soldier, 2 Palestinians Killed In Separate Shootings
In Israel
<[link removed]>



“A Palestinian opened fire on an Israeli military checkpoint in east
Jerusalem on Saturday night, killing a female Israeli soldier and wounding
three other people, Israeli authorities said. The attack came hours after a
pair of Palestinian teenagers were killed during an Israeli military raid in
the occupied West Bank. It was the latest bloodshed in the deadliest round of
fighting in the area in seven years. It also came less than 24 hours before
Israel was to begin celebrating the weeklong Sukkot holiday, a time when tens
of thousands of Jews visit the holy city. Saturday night's shooting occurred at
a checkpoint near the Shuafat refugee camp in east Jerusalem. Police said the
assailant got out of a car and opened fire, seriously wounding the female
soldier and a security guard before running into the camp. The army announced
early Sunday that the soldier, who was 19, had died. Police said two members of
the paramilitary border police unit were lightly wounded by shrapnel. Police
said they were searching for the attacker, with special forces and a helicopter
involved in the search. Police said early Sunday that they had arrested one
person on suspicion of involvement in the attack but were continuing the
manhunt.”



Nigeria



All Africa: Nigeria: Military Kills 19 Terrorists, Arrests 42 Logistics
Suppliers In Borno <[link removed]>



“The Defence Headquarters (DHQ) said troops of Operation Hadin Kai killed 19
Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP)/ Boko Haram terrorists and arrested
42 logistics suppliers while 418 terrorists surrendered to troops in two weeks.
The director of Defence Media Operations Major General Musa Danmadami who
disclosed this at the biweekly update on the Armed Forces of Nigeria operations
between September 22 to October 6, 2022 said all arrested Boko Haram Terrorist
criminals have been handed over to the appropriate authority for further action
while surrendered Boko Haram Terrorist/Islamic State of West Africa Province
terrorists and their families are being profiled for further action. He said
the troops between September 22 to October 4, 2022, arrested 29 Boko Haram
Terrorist/Islamic State of West Africa Province logistic suppliers during
clearance operations. General Danmadami said the troops recovered from the Boko
Haram suspects 50 big bags of dry fish, two big sacks of fried meat, 55 jerry
cans of Premium Motor Spirit, one big bag of coal, 13 bags of breads, one bag
of salt, one bag of beans, five cartons of detergent, three packs of batteries,
50 leathers of mosquito coil, 10 mobile phones, four vehicles, one bicycle and
the sum of 2,479,740.00 cash.”



All Africa: Nigeria: 35,000 Killed, 1.8 Million Persons Displaced In North By
Boko Haram - Report <[link removed]>



“No fewer than 35,000 persons have been reported killed in Northern Nigeria
and 1.8 million others displaced in Borno, Adamawa and Yobe states since 2009
when Boko Haram launched its insurgency. This was disclosed by Gloria Mabeiam
Ballason in a paper titled: “Forensic Evidence Gathering After Mass Atrocities:
North East And North West Nigeria In Perspective,” which she delivered at the
5th Molluma Yakubu Centre for Medical Law and Mass Atrocities Accountability
annual lecture series at the House of Justice Complex, Kaduna. She disclosed
that, “According to the Global Centre for the Responsibility to Protect (Global
R2P), more than 35,000 people have been killed in Northern Nigeria since 2009
when Boko Haram launched its insurgency with at least 1.8million Internally
Displaced Persons in Adamawa, Yobe and Borno states” adding that trade,
commerce, health services and education amongst other transactions, had been
disrupted by the insurgents. “Since 2011, violence has escalated in Central and
North-West Nigeria. The states in this region include Kaduna, Kano, Katsina,
Kebbi, Sokoto and Zamfara. Jigawa and Kano are also in the North Central but
have not really been affected. The areas which have also been heavily affected
include Southern Kaduna, Taraba, Benue, Plateau, Nassarawa, Niger, Kogi and
parts of the Federal Capital Territory.”



Somalia



Voice Of America: Somalia Warns Media Not To Publish Al-Shabab Propaganda
<[link removed]>



“Somalia's government announced Saturday a crackdown on media outlets that
publish what it deems propaganda for the Islamist militant group al-Shabab and
warned that offenders would be punished. The move comes as Somalia's armed
forces, backed by local militias and international allies, wage an aggressive
counteroffensive against the al-Qaida affiliate. “I want to inform the Somali
media and all Somali people in general that we will regard all al-Shabab
related propaganda coverage including their terrorist acts and their ideology
as punishable crimes,” Deputy Information Minister Abdirahman Yusuf said. “The
Somali government is totally banning all kinds of coverage relating to the
terrorist ideology and acts of intimidation by (al Shabab),” he told reporters
at a news conference in the capital Mogadishu. “Their audio clips, video clips,
photos, and messages cannot be disseminated.” Yusuf said the government has
also launched cyber operations against “terrorist accounts” on social media and
had disabled more than 40 on platforms such as Facebook and Twitter in the past
48 hours. “Other online sources like applications and websites which terrorists
use to spread their messages will also be traced and suspended accordingly,” he
added. Yusuf insisted it was not a question of clamping down on free speech and
later told AFP the measures would not affect normal news coverage about
al-Shabab by journalists in Somalia.”



All Africa: Somalia: Somali Troops Kill 19 Militants In Repelled Al-Shabaab
Attack <[link removed]>



“Somali National Army killed 19 Al-Shabab members in a repulsed attack at an
army base near Bal'ad district in the Middle Shabelle region, on Friday
morning. The state media reported that the ongoing offensive operations against
Al-Shabab have led to taking control over vast swathes of Galmudug, Southwest,
and the Hirshabelle. Somali National Armed Forces backed by locals are
committed to eliminating Al-Shabaab, said the military. The Somali Govt urged
the public to support the army to win the war. Al-Shabaab has been fighting to
oust the Somali government and expel the AU troops from the country for over a
decade and its insurgency has not realized its goal, as seen on the ground.”



Africa



CNN: ISIS-Linked Militants Are Threatening Huge Natural Gas Reserves The World
Needs Badly Right Now
<[link removed]>



“Asmani Dadi had heard rumors about the insurgents. Then, one day, they came
true. It was July 2020 and Dadi was a student in the town of Mocímboa da Praia,
northern Mozambique. “They came … from the forest and began to kill people.
When they found children, … they stole them back to the forest. And when they
find men… they cut off their heads,” Dadi recalled. The attack was just one in
a festering insurgency by ISIS-linked militants in the southern African nation
that has killed at least 4000 civilians and displaced nearly one million
people, according to the United Nations Refugee Agency, UNHCR. “They first
arrived in this area to spread their propaganda. To say they were Muslim men.
But Muslim men should not kill like this,” said Dadi Mozambique has huge
natural gas reserves – a resource that, if exploited effectively, could change
its fortunes and help the world as it struggles to find enough natural gas to
heat homes and fuel industry following Russia’s war on Ukraine. The insurgency,
however, jeopardizes Mozambique’s entire economic future, and the battle
against the militants is now international. Soldiers and military personnel
from 10 nations are combating the fighters. Among them are Rwandan forces that
have now largely regained control of a portion of Mozambique’s northernmost
Cabo Delgado province, which is home to Palma and Mocímboa da Praia.”



AFP: Sahel Military Coups Only Help Jihadists: Analysts
<[link removed]>



“Burkina Faso's new rulers say they seized power to better fight jihadists,
but history in the Sahel suggests the coup will merely stoke turbulence and
division, benefitting the insurgents, analysts say. The poor, arid region has
been wracked by jihadist insecurity since 2012. It began in northern Mali then
in 2015 spread to its centre and neighbouring Niger and Burkina Faso, claiming
thousands of lives and prompting more than two million people to flee their
homes. A new junta led by 34-year-old Captain Ibrahim Traore seized power in
Burkina Faso last week, in the second such power grab since January blamed on
failures to quell jihadist attacks. It followed two similar coups in Mali in
2020 and 2021. The latest takeover comes during a struggle for influence
between France and Russia in the former French colonies, whose leaders appear
to be increasingly turning to Moscow to help battle the jihadists. But analyst
Yvan Guichaoua said the coup would only serve the interests of the jihadists --
the Al-Qaeda-linked Group to Support Islam and Muslims (GSIM) and the local
branch of the Islamic State group. “The big winners are not the Russians or the
French, but GSIM and IS,” said Guichaou, an expert at the Brussels School of
International Studies. “What a disaster.”



Asharq Al-Awsat: Morocco Committed To Addressing Terrorism Threat In Africa
<[link removed]>



“Morocco’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, African Cooperation and Moroccans
Abroad Nasser Bourita said on Friday Rabat is committed to promoting
cooperation in order to address the complex and transnational nature of the
terrorist threat in Africa. This commitment is reflected first by the Kingdom's
accession to several sub-regional cooperation frameworks aimed at strengthening
the collective capacity of African countries to protect their borders from
these threats, Bourita told a ministerial meeting of the African Union's Peace
and Security Council (AU-PSC). The meeting, the first held under the Moroccan
AU-PSC chairmanship for the month of October, focused on development and
de-radicalization as levers in the fight against terrorism and violent
extremism. Bourita highlighted Morocco’s efforts in de-radicalization,
including the establishment of specialized institutions to train African imams,
such as the Foundation Mohammed VI of African Ulema. The foundation is a real
platform for exchange and sharing to address the misinterpretation of religious
texts and messages. Bourita stressed that the Kingdom is committed to promoting
and defending African security concerns at international arenas, including
during his three consecutive terms as co-chair of the Global Counter-Terrorism
Forum (GCTF) and his co-chairmanship of the Africa Focus Group of the Global
Coalition against ISIS.”



France



Associated Press: France’s Ex-President: Bastille Day Attack Was “Terror Act”
<[link removed]>



“Former French President François Hollande told a special terrorism court on
Monday that the man who drove a truck into a crowded beachfront in Nice on
Bastille Day six years ago, killing 86 people, was a terrorist who had gone
undetected by security services despite France being on high alert for
extremist attacks following the Islamic State massacres in Paris. Thousands of
people had packed Nice’s famed boardwalk on the Mediterranean coast on July 14,
2016, to celebrate France’s national holiday. Shortly after the end of a
fireworks display, the truck careered through the crowd for two kilometers (1¼
miles) like a snowplow, slamming into person after person. The final death toll
was 86, including 15 children and adolescents, while 450 others were injured.
The attacker, Mohamed Lahouaiej Bouhlel, a 31-year-old Tunisian with French
residency, was killed by police soon afterward. The Islamic State group claimed
responsibility for the carnage. However, French prosecutors said while Bouhlel
had been inspired by the extremist group’s propaganda, investigators found no
evidence that IS orchestrated the attack. Eight people are on trial in a
special Paris terrorism court accused of helping Bouhlel carry out the attack.
The trial opened on Sept. 5 and is being broadcast live to a convention center
in Nice for victims’ family members not traveling to Paris for the proceedings.”



Europe



AFP: Brussels 2016 Attacks Trial To Resume On November 30
<[link removed]>



“The trial for the 2016 Brussels attacks will resume on November 30, a
Belgian court said on Friday, after being delayed to replace controversial
glass boxes intended for the accused, including French jihadist Salah Abdeslam.
Defence lawyers had argued that they could not freely consult with their
clients and requested that the cubicles be removed, which a judge agreed to,
ruling that they violated European law. Nine alleged members of the Islamic
State (IS) group cell that launched both the March 2016 suicide bombings in
Belgium and the November 2015 attacks in Paris face terrorism charges. The
Belgian attacks, in which three suicide bombers targeted Brussels airport and a
crowded underground metro station, killed 32 people and shattered the lives of
hundreds of wounded or traumatised survivors. A tenth suspect, the suspected
planner of the terror campaign, is presumed killed and will be tried in
absentia. The trial is the largest ever staged in front of a Belgian jury, with
960 civil plaintiffs represented and the sprawling former headquarters of the
NATO military alliance converted into a high-security court complex.The
investigation quickly revealed, with the help of a computer found in a rubbish
bin, that the perpetrators of the Brussels attacks were linked to those
responsible for the attacks that left 130 dead in Paris.”



The Jerusalem Post: After Genocide At Hands Of ISIS, Yazidis Seek Help In
Cyprus <[link removed]>



“Yazidi refugees who come from the communities that suffered genocide under
ISIS have found their way to Cyprus. According to an activist who works with
the Yazidi minority and genocide survivors, a total of eight families arrived
in Cyprus several weeks ago. Yazidis are a religious minority that mostly
resides in Iraq, but some have historically lived in areas that became Syria
and Turkey as well. In recent years they have suffered brutal persecution by
terrorists and extremist groups. ISIS committed genocide against Yazidis in
Sinjar in northern Iraq, killing and kidnapping thousands. Since the genocide
in 2014 many hundreds of thousands of Yazidis have been forced into displaced
persons camps. This caused many to seek better lives elsewhere, traveling
through Turkey to Europe. As members of a minority group that has been
persecuted by Islamist extremists, they often face persecution along the
journey, sometimes at the hands of other people who claim to be refugees.
According to the source, dozens of Yazidis continue to migrate through Greece
to the rest of Europe. It is not usual that they end up in Cyprus because the
journey is more complex and dangerous. However, recently several families ended
up in Cyprus near Nicosia. One is a mother with two children, and her other
children and husband were still stranded in Turkey.”



The Counter Extremism Project depends on the generosity of its supporters. If
you value what we do, please consider making a donation.

DONATE NOW
<[link removed]>




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