Islamist Wave 2014 - News & Discussion

10 posts

Angocachi
Following a series of four car bombings in Cairo last Friday , Islamist militants also shot down a helicopter over the weekend, indicating a trend in the growing strength of rebel military groups.

According to The New York Times , the attack on the Egyptian military helicopter with surface-to-air missiles, "validated longstanding fears that such weapons would spill into Egypt and beyond after the Libyan civil war tore open Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi’s fearsome arsenals." The group that carried out the attack in the Sinai Peninsula are called the Champions of Jerusalem and are apparently inspired by al-Qaeda .

The group released video supposedly showing the rocket being fired and colliding with the chopper.

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/embed/52FSbORUEp8
(the logo is the Al Qaeda flag, invented and first used by Al Qaeda in Iraq)

The attack comes the same weekend as a celebration held by the military-backed Egyptian government to commemorate the third anniversary of the toppling of Egypt's government. More than 250 people were injured in protests over the weekend and 49 were killed . According to the government, 350 people were arrested nationwide .

http://www.thewire.com/global/2014/01/islamist-insurgency-egypt-growing-stronger/357400/
Niccolo and Donkey
This is incorrect. If this were the case, they'd make great concessions in Geneva to wrap this up and move on to the next stage.

They need a pliant regime in Damascus to do an end run around Russia since the BTC is a white elephant and to neutralize Hezbollah, thus setting the stage for the attack on Iran.
SweetLeftFoot

Doesn't look to be anything supposed about it to me. Looks to me like they nail that chopper.

Thing is that for all the talk about the missiles getting out, the bigger worry is the amount of people who can use them effectively.

They aren't just point and shoot.
Angocachi

Israeli official: Assad preferable to extremist rebels

According to Israeli intelligence officer quoted in report, weakened but intact Syria under President Bashar Assad is better for Israel and region than takeover by Islamist rebels.

http://www.haaretz.com/news/diploma...t-rebels-the-times-of-london-reports-1.524605

Western nations fear Assad ceding power will lead to Islamist militants taking over Syria.



West signals to Syrian opposition Assad may stay

http://www.jpost.com/Middle-East/West-signals-to-Syrian-opposition-Assad-may-stay-335306



Ex-IDF chief: Israel prefers that Assad stay in power

http://www.timesofisrael.com/ex-idf-chief-israel-prefers-that-assad-stay-in-power/
Niccolo and Donkey

Wow, Jewish media say something and we're supposed to believe it.

Angocachi
There has and remains a push to oust Assad, but since the beginning of this conflict there have been two camps in the US-Israeli policy making crowd;

1. Oust Assad so that Hezbollah is neutralized, move onto Iran, thereby securing Israel, opening Iran to Anglo-American energy firms, and reducing Russia's proxies in the world.

2. Leave the fucker alone as long as he keeps Syria out of Ikhwani and Salafi hands.

The second party has taken charge of policy.

The US is more concerned about keeping AQ out of Damascus than it is getting Assad out. This is evidenced by the sudden flow of assistance to rebel groups fighting the ISIS... who couldn't get a drop when they were fighting Assad's military.



Another article;
"A sharp increase in the number of al-Qaida linked fighters joining the fight against President Bashar Assad in Syria is threatening to spill over the borders and prompting the Jewish state to re-evaluate its policy of neutrality in the civil war next door, a senior Israeli intelligence official warned on Friday.
The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because military regulations prevent him from releasing the information, claimed more than 30,000 al-Qaida linked fighters are active in Syria, a huge increase over previous Western estimates. He did not disclose how Israel reached the figure or specify which groups were included in the count, only defining the fighters as believers in "global jihad," which he said meant a mix of those linked to al-Qaida or inspired by the terror network.
The Israeli official estimated that just two years ago there were only about 2,000 jihadis in Syria but claimed the number has mushroomed to more than 30,000 as the conflict has dragged on, presenting the Middle East with a far more dangerous threat. He claimed that the Islamic rebel groups in Syria currently focused on toppling Assad intend to turn their sites on Israel after dispatching the Syrian government.
"After Assad and after establishing or strengthening their foothold in Syria they are going to move and deflect their effort and attack Israel," he told The Associated Press.
Israeli officials cite at least two cases of recent rocket fire from Lebanon they attribute to the al-Qaida-linked groups _ although independent observers widely interpreted those as an attempt by extremist groups to prompt Israeli strikes on southern Lebanon, where the Assad-allied Lebanese Hezbollah militant group has a strong presence.
Aside from a few airstrikes against what were believed to be advanced weapons shipments from Syria into Lebanon, Israel has kept a low profile since the uprising against Assad began in March 2011, hoping to avoid being dragged into the conflict.
With the absence of any potential ally and any hope that a good resolution could come from the fighting, Israeli conventional wisdom has held that it was better off with it continuing and having the rival forces stay busy butchering each other rather than noticing Israel.
But that may not be the case anymore. "The longer the war in Syria continues, the more jihadists and radicals are coming to this territory," the official said.
Israel, which borders southwestern Syria, has periodically called for Assad's ouster, particularly after reports of his use of chemical weapons and other atrocities against civilians. But at the same time it has been wary of saying or doing anything more fearing that any group that supplants him would be a far more dangerous adversary.
"Formally it hasn't changed," the high-ranking officer said of Israel's policy. But, he said, many discussions are taking place behind closed doors about the possibility of rethinking that strategy.
The jihadis currently control most of the Syrian territory that directly borders Israel, although they have not fired rockets or missiles at Israeli territory.
Two al-Qaida-linked groups are known to operate in Syria _ Jabhat al-Nusra, also known as Nusra Front, and the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant. The groups, which have both been designated terrorist organizations by the United States, have been bolstered by the influx of thousands of foreign fighters from across the Muslim world as well as Europe and North America who have flocked to Syria to take up arms against Assad.
Other rebel groups that are generally included in Israel's definition, including Ahrar al-Sham and Jaish al-Islam, follow an ultraconservative ideology and call for the creation of an Islamic state, but have a more nationalist bent than the al-Qaida-affiliated factions and are not proponents of so-called "global jihad."
Aron Lund, editor of the Carnegie Endowment's "Syria in Crisis" website, said the home-grown rebel groups such as Arhar al-Sham and Jaish al-Islam are focused on fighting in Syria and toppling Assad, not staging global attacks.
Lund was also wary of any figures for al-Qaida-linked fighters in Syria, noting the difficulty in accurately determining such numbers amid the blurry lines of the country's chaotic conflict.
"I don't even know how you calculate that. Who's a fighter? Is it anyone with a gun, or is it anyone fighting at the front lines? Is it anyone helping out doing media work and medical work and organization?" he said. "I'm very skeptical of the comparisons that the uprising is X percent this and X percent that."
To Israel, Assad is a bitter enemy, an ally of Iran and a major backer of Lebanese Hezbollah guerrilla attacks against it. But like his father whom he succeeded as president, he has faithfully observed U.S.-brokered accords that ended the 1973 war with Israel. The Golan Heights frontier has remained quiet for the past 40 years, with only recent instances of cross-border fire disturbing the peace. To this point Israel believes most of the fire against it has been accidental, spillover from internal battles.
The officer said 1,200 fighters belonging to five radical Islamic groups, including three with direct links to al-Qaida and the Nusra Front, were already in the Gaza Strip and have fired rockets at Israel from the Palestinian territory.
He said the infiltration has thus far been largely kept out of Israel and the West Bank, thanks to joint Israeli and Palestinian efforts. But dangers loom on that front too.
Just this week, Israel said it had broken up an al-Qaida plot to bomb the U.S. Embassy in Tel Aviv and major convention center in Jerusalem _ the first time Israel explicitly accused the group of being behind an attempted attack. Palestinian security forces recently arrested about 20 young men who allegedly tried to set up an organization of ultraconservative Salafis.
Last November, Israeli forces killed three members of that group in a shootout in the city of Hebron. Israeli security officials say there is some cooperation with their Palestinian counterparts in the West Bank to keep the Salafis under watch."
http://www.thepublicopinion.com/new...cle_cb7949f8-9719-5ba1-bed3-c4c49823540d.html
Angocachi

-US Director of National Intelligence says that Al Qaeda no longer on the run and that its branches in Syria and Yemen desire and are training for attacks in the US and Europe. He says that Al Qaeda is no less a threat than it was a decade ago.

Here we find yet another disconnect between the American intelligence community and the White House. This comes just after Obama characterized regional AQ branches as 'JV', 'not Kobe Bryant'. This comment from Obama was in response to recent headlines from the likes of Peter Bergen that AQ 'now has more territory than ever.'

The Long War Journal has released a two part scathing and very detailed rebuttal to the White House spokesperson's assertion that Zawahiri has no command of regional AQ branches and that he is the only remaining Member of 'core AQ' still alive and free. LWJ's first piece elicited an angry and jumbled response from the White House spokesperson, which LWJ demolished piece by piece. Zawahiri is in command of global AQ, and much of his 9/11 days organization is intact.

-Boko Haram has massacred 50-100 Christians in Northern Nigeria near thr border with Cameroon. Meanwhile, Muslims in CAR are being cleaned out by Christian militias. The midline between Africa that marks the border between Christianity and Islam is a long stretch of conflict.

-The Philippines have reached another agreement with the primary Moro insurgent group, and have sent in the military to mop up the dissenting group.
This is how its been in Bangsamoro for some time now. The capital throws some bones at the secularist rebels, they stand down, and the true believers are left to fend for themselves.
The only way to break this cycle is to kill the compromisers.

-The leader of Ahrar as Sham has released a statement against Baghdadi, the leader of the ISIL, following a tape by Zawahiri ordering Syrian Mujahideen to cease fighting. It looks like Baghdadi is all alone, fighting the FSA, IF, Sahwa, and Maliki, with their American, Saudi, Qatari, Iranian, and Turkish backers. Even Nusra and Zawahiri are displeased with him.
And then today reports come out that the Turkish military has attacked an ISIL convoy by airstrike, and has sent in tanks to thwart them further.

Angocachi

The Islamic State of Iraq & the Levant has set up in Lebanon

Faced with recent setbacks in Iraq and Syria, al Qaeda is slowly but firmly gaining influence in Lebanon, helped by the country's increasing sectarian violence and the turmoil caused by Syria's civil war, sources close to the group say.

Lebanon, a small Mediterranean state with a fragile sectarian power sharing system, has seen the worst of the Syria's war spillover with car bombs in Beirut and Tripoli, gunfights in city streets and rocket fire in the Bekaa Valley.

The violence is exacerbated by Lebanon's own sectarian divisions and entrenching them. Shi'ite Hezbollah supports President Bashar al-Assad while his rebel opponents are backed by Sunni Muslims including Islamists and al Qaeda fighters.

In Syria, the al Qaeda-linked Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) holds territory in the north and east but has been on the defensive in recent weeks after coming under attack from rival rebel groups that resent its harsh rule.

The sources say it is now seeking to expand in Lebanon, particularly the northern city of Tripoli, plagued by violence and lawlessness since the start of Syria's uprising nearly three years ago.

The accounts from the sources, including fighters who support and oppose al Qaeda in Syria, appeared to be supported at the weekend when a statement in the name of Abu Sayyaf al-Ansary - described as al Qaeda's commander in Lebanon - said the group had put down roots in Lebanon.

In an audio statement Ansary declared allegiance to the head of ISIL. Speaking, he said, from Tripoli, he announced Lebanon would be a gateway for al Qaeda to strike at Israel.

Several Syrian rebel sources said the group was in the final stages of establishing itself in Lebanon's north - a region seen as fertile ground for the group where many people have adopted a stricter interpretation of Sunni Islam in the past few years.

Dozens of people have been killed in Tripoli in the past year in violence between Alawites - the offshoot of Shi'ite Islam to which Assad and his family belong - and Sunnis.

ROOTS OF CONFLICT

The hatred goes back to the 1980s when Syrian troops, sent by Bashar's father Hafez al-Assad, with the help of local Alawites in Tripoli crushed Sunnis who were seen close to the Palestinian groups fighting in Lebanon.

After Lebanon's 15-year civil war ended in 1990, consecutive governments concentrated rebuilding and investment in the capital Beirut, leaving other cities struggling with relative poverty, unemployment and an alienated underclass.

As well as the deprived cities, the mainly Sunni Muslim Palestinian refugee camps - home to most of the 440,000 Palestinians living in Lebanon - are also a potential breeding ground for jihadis. So far they have produced small groups who have gone to fight in Afghanistan, Iraq and other conflicts abroad rather than building up forces in Lebanon itself.

Against that backdrop, a local commander in Syria who is close to al Qaeda commanders there said Ansary had been given the conditional blessing of ISIL leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi to announce al Qaeda's presence in Lebanon.

"There will be statement in the next few days and the world will know then what will happen in Lebanon, and with God's will it will warm the heart of the faithful," he said.

While the group is expected to focus on Tripoli as a base, local commanders may be present in the northern province of Akkar, in the Bekaa Valley and the southern city of Sidon, where supporters of Sunni Islamist Sheikh Ahmed al-Assir clashed with the army last year.

Residents say al Qaeda is already calling the shots in some Tripoli neighborhoods and areas of the northern province of Akkar and the Bekaa Valley. Black and white flags associated with its uncompromising Islamist agenda openly fly from the streets and balconies of some Tripoli districts.

Baghdadi, an Iraqi who leads thousands of fighters from across the world but mainly from Iraq, Egypt and Libya, initially sent his men to fight alongside Syrian rebels, most of them Islamists.

But many Syrian fighters grew to resent his dominance, especially after his fighters killed and tortured hundreds of Syrians including other Islamist fighters.

"His dream is to create a state, he cannot see anything else but that and will crush anybody who stands in his way," said a Syrian commander who fights against al Qaeda.

"He even spilt our blood because we refused to consider him our Emir (leader). So for him we are infidels now standing in the way of the state just like the Shi'ites, Jews and others."

Baghdadi even challenged the overall al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahri a few months ago when Zawahri called on him to leave the Syrian battlefield to another al Qaeda affiliate, the Nusra Front. The two groups have clashed in recent weeks as Islamist fighters launched coordinated attacks on ISIL this month.

LOOKING FOR A NEW HOME

After that setback in Syria - and an army offensive against its stronghold in western Iraq - Lebanon could offer both a new recruiting ground and a base for attacks.

"They are looking to fulfill their dream. They are 'Iraq and the Levant', which means Syria, Lebanon, Jordan and Palestine. They will not stop now," said a commander whose men detained fighters from ISIL during battles in northern Syria.

The sources were divided over how powerful the group is at this stage in Lebanon. Some said it had already established its base and would launch more organized attacks in the country, while others said it was still in final preparatory stages.

"Our understanding is that they are around 80 percent established but not fully established. They are still not well organized or the cells connected to each other," said another Syrian commander via Skype. "They are in the process of re-grouping, that is what we know."

Sources in Tripoli said that a debate took place for weeks among the jihadis on whether to go public. They were told by higher command to wait for approval from Baghdadi.

Saturday's audio statement, posted on YouTube in Abu Sayyaf al-Ansary's name, suggests that approval has been granted.

Ansary said Sunnis in Lebanon were mistreated by the powerful Shi'ite Hezbollah. He called on Sunnis to unite and saluted recent bombings in Shi'ite areas claimed by al Qaeda-linked Abdallah Azzam Brigades but said they were not enough.

"After the flag of Islam was raised from Iraq to the Levant ... we have decided to announce our allegiance to them," he said. "We swear allegiance to Emir Abu Bakr al-Husseini al-Baghdadi, from Tripoli, so that we will be a door for him, God willing, from Lebanon to the holy site (Jerusalem)."

"So we offered the idea of regenerating their cells in Lebanon so that we continue the path of jihad which has scared America in its den."

A spokesman named Abu Omar would issue a statement with more details soon, he said. The sources said the new statement may come as soon as Friday.

Lebanon arrested a leader of the al Qaeda-linked Abdullah Azzam brigades this month, who died in custody days later.

"The north (of Lebanon) is a fertile ground for this for many reasons. People are extremists - but because of ignorance," said a third Syrian commander who lives in Turkey. He predicted an escalation in violence in Lebanon but said all-out conflict remained unlikely for now.

"More car bombs and explosions will happen here and there. As for an all out war in Lebanon, I think it's not possible in the near term," he said.

Reuters

Angocachi
Al-Qaeda's general command has disavowed all links with the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), according to a statement posted online.

The statement, published late on Sunday, reiterated a previous peremptory statement in which the group's chief Ayman al-Zawahiri ordered ISIL to disband and return to Iraq, and adding that Jabhat al-Nusra was al-Qaeda's official branch in Syria.

"Al-Qaeda announces it is not linked to the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, as it was not informed of its creation [and] did not accept it," read Sunday's statement, which criticised ISIL's mode of operations.

ISIL "is not a branch of al-Qaeda, has no links to it, and the [al-Qaeda] group is not responsible for its acts," it added.

"We affirm our disavowal from the sedition that is occurring in Syria between factions of jihadists, and from the blood that was shed by any party," it said.

Uprising undermined

In recent weeks, ISIL consolidated its grip on the northern city of Raqa, the only provincial capital to fall out of regime control since the outbreak of Syria's uprising in March 2011, imposing their strict version of Sharia law on residents.

ISIL also issued four statements ordering women to wear the niqab in public, forbidding the sale of cigarettes and narghile (water pipe) products, banning music and making attendance of Friday prayers compulsory.

It has also killed the leaders of two rival rebel groups on Saturday.

Small but powerful, ISIL has been caught up in battles with other armed groups often triggered by disputes over authority and territory, and has also clashed with secular rebels.

The internecine fighting - among the bloodiest in the three-year conflict - has undermined the uprising against President Bashar al-Assad and dismayed Western powers pushing for peace talks.

Rebel-on-rebel violence in Syria has killed at least 1,800 this year alone. The tensions erupted in early January into armed clashes between ISIL and other rebel groups.

Charles Lister, visiting fellow at Brookings Doha Centre, said the al-Qaeda statement "represents an attempt to re-assert some level of authority over the jihad in Syria" following a month of fighting and ISIL disobedience.

"This represents a strong and forthright move by [al Qaeda] and will undoubtedly serve to further consolidate Jabhat al-Nusra's role as al-Qaeda's official presence in Syria."

http://www.aljazeera.com/news/middl...owns-isil-rebels-syria-20142385858351969.html
Angocachi

Koreabang.com