At the European Security conference in Munich, last February,
US Defense Secretary Robert Gates told European nations that they
were under direct threat from Islamist extremists and that this
phenomenon would not go away. His warning followed Western intelligence
services which already established operational links between al-Qaeda
in Afghanistan and the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) whose goals include
striking at the heart of Europe. (see our analysis: Defeated
in Iraq Al Qaeda Migrates to Maghreb - Next Stop: Europe).
"I am concerned that many people on this continent may not
comprehend the magnitude of the direct threat to European security"
the secretary lamented. Gates warned: "The threat posed by
violent Islamic extremism is real - and it is not going away.
Europeans knew "all too well" about the Madrid bombings
that killed 191 people in March 2004 and the attacks in London
that left 56 dead in July 2005, but further from the spotlight
there had been "multiple smaller attacks" in cities
from Glasgow to Istanbul", Secretary Gates said.
Al-Qaeda has not made any secrets of its eagerness to target
Europe. Indeed, Osama bin Laden's number two, Ayman al-Zawahiri,
has repeatedly threatened Europe. In September 2006 he appeared
in a video website on the fifth anniversary of the 11 September
attacks, urging to punish France as prime target for Islamist
militants. Pierre de Bousquet de Florian, then head of the DST
(domestic security service), said the threat of terrorist attack
in France remained "very high and very international".
In fact, the Islamic terrorist group continues to
be the most serious terrorism threat to Europe, said Gilles de
Kerchove, newly appointed coordinator of counter-terrorism efforts
among EU member states, speaking to the European Parliament, last
November. He mentioned European converts to radical Islam having
had a hand in several recent terrorism plots on European soil,
including a foiled attack in Germany in 2007. German counter terrorist
authorities claimed of up to 50 Islamic militants linked to the
three men were suspected planning to assassinate the head of Germany's
federal police, Joerg Ziercke. Two German citizens and one Turkish
national were arrested in connection with the plot. They allegedly
trained in terrorism camps in Pakistan before founding the domestic
cell of an al Qaeda affiliate inside Germany.
Also, last September, based on information provided
by US intelligence, German counter terror agents arrested three
members of an al-Qaeda cell that planned to bomb Frankfurt airport
and the nearby US military air base at Ramstein. This network
allegedly had ties to other European countries, since the explosives
seized were similar to those used in the London plots. The investigation
also showed that the alleged terrorists had connections to both
Pakistan and Syria. Another important fact revealed that two of
the three were Muslim converts. However, thanks to the outstanding
job of counter-terrorism services, fortunately, al-Qaeda's only
major success in Europe in 2007 was the June 30 attack on Glasgow
airport that killed one and injured five. That attack had followed
two foiled car bombs in the center of London that could have killed
hundreds, had it been successful. The scheme was nicknamed the
"doctors' plot," because it was planned by foreign doctors
who resided in Britain.
In Spain, which is also a major target for Islamic
terrorism, security services dismantled an al-Qaeda affiliated
terror cell almost exclusively manned by Pakistani, except for
a single Indian member. It was planning a terror attack in Barcelona.
The local newspaper El Pais reported, that interrogations revealed
a wave of planned attacks in Germany, France, Britain and Portugal.
Britain's intelligence Chief Jonathan Evans has also spoken out
against domestic radicalism, saying that the number of individuals
in Britain with suspected terrorist links has risen to at least
2,000 in 2007, compared with less than 1,600 in 2006. "As
I speak, terrorists are methodically and intentionally targeting
young people and children in this country," he said in a
speech to the Society of Editors Conference in Manchester. "They
are radicalizing, indoctrinating and grooming young, vulnerable
people to carry out acts of terrorism."
Tom Fingar - a former State Department intelligence
officer and currently, chairman of the National Intelligence Council
(NIC), an office, under the director of national intelligence,
that leads the joint National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) drafting
process - expressed concern about the possibility of Europe-based
terrorists attacking the United States, citing the ease of travel
from European countries. His concern is very real: For example,
a convicted terrorist known as Dhiren Barot, a Hindu Indian by
birth, converted to Islam, worked as an airline ticket and reservations
agent in Central London, when he was arrested by British agents
in 1994. Now serving a thirty-year sentence in a British prison,
Barot had "reconnaissance plans" of buildings in New
York and Washington, including Citigroup, the New York Stock Exchange,
and International Monetary Fund headquarters.
Another terrorist, Younis Tsouli, a Moroccan born
UK resident, who recently pleaded guilty to terrorism charges
in Britain, was an administrator of an online jihadist forum.
On his laptop, authorities discovered a folder labeled "Washington"
containing video clips of the U.S. Capitol grounds and the World
Bank's D.C. headquarters. US counter terrorist agents claim that
terrorists from European countries face far fewer obstacles to
infiltrating the United States. A majority of them can make the
trip legally under the visa waiver program. In addition, many
of them speak English and have experience living in Western countries,
making it far easier for them to adapt to life in America.
An extremely interesting study on the cultural
threat, posed by Islamic terror on Europe was published in "The
Washington Quarterly" Summer 2004 edition, by Timothy M.
Savage, a former U.S. foreign service officer, titled "Europe
and Islam: Crescent Waxing, Cultures Clashing". According
to Savage, the world of Islam may do more to define and shape
Europe in the twenty-first century than the United States, Russia,
or even the European Union. The Islamic challenge that Europe
faces today is twofold: Internally, Europe must integrate a ghettoized,
but rapidly growing Muslim minority, that many Europeans view
as encroaching upon the collective identity and public values
of European society. Externally, Europe needs to devise a viable
approach to the primarily Muslim-populated volatile states, stretching
from Casablanca to the Caucasus, that are a currently focus of
the EU’s recently adopted security strategy. Mr. Savage
warns that the European-Islamic nexus is spinning off a variety
of new phenomena, including the rise of terrorism; for instance,
the emergence of a new kind of anti-Semitism; the shift of established
European political parties to the right and the recalibration
of European national political calculations.
According to Timothy Savage's study, Europe’s
track record of engagement with Islam over the last 1,350 years
is not very encouraging. Although trying to explore some new initiatives,
Europeans seem still inclined to pursue a status quo approach,
at home and abroad, preferring caution, predictability, control,
and established structures over the required boldness, adaptability,
engagement, and redefined relationships that the new demographic
challenges require. A similar mind-set is evident among Europe’s
Muslim population. With more than 23 million Muslims residing
currently in Europe, already comprising nearly 5 percent of the
population, the danger exists that, if suitable accommodation
is not reached in time, current dynamics will likely yield a Europe,
that not only faces increased social strife, national retrenchment,
and even civil conflict domestically, but also could well succumb
to a "Fortress Europe" posture, signaling even its political
decline on the international stage.