Summary: Lone-wolf terrorists lured by jihadist Web sites
Last weekend’s bombings in Sweden illustrate the danger posed by a new generation of terrorists who are lured into attacks on the West through contacts with al Qaeda over the Internet, analysts said.That was the path 28-year-old Taimour Abdulwahab took to a suicide car bombing in Stockholm on Saturday. “This is a major problem now, the self-radicalized jihadist who reaches out to al Qaeda or its allies for training — usually in Pakistan or Yemen but perhaps this time in Iraq — and returns to Europe or America to conduct terror,” said Bruce Riedel, a former CIA official and terrorism expert at RAND, a think tank in Washington. “Because these individuals have very little exposure to other jihadists they are difficult to catch until it is too late.”
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Last weekends bombings in Sweden illustrate the danger posed by a
new generation of terrorists who are lured into attacks on the West
through contacts with al Qaeda over the Internet, analysts
said.That was the path 28yearold Taimour Abdulwahab took to a
suicide car bombing in Stockholm on Saturday. This is a major
problem now, the selfradicalized jihadist who reaches out to al
Qaeda or its allies for training usually in Pakistan or Yemen but
perhaps this time in Iraq and returns to Europe or America to
conduct terror, said Bruce Riedel, a former CIA official and
terrorism expert at RAND, a think tank in Washington. Because these
individuals have very little exposure to other jihadists they are
difficult to catch until it is too late.The difficulty of capturing
terrorists who operate alone, while gaining advice and support over
the Internet, has been evidenced recently in the United States by
the Fort Hood shooting, the attempted Times Square bombing and the
Oregon bomb plot, experts say.A U.S. official, who spoke on
condition of anonymity because of the nature of his work, stated
that the intelligence community is concerned that al Qaeda and
other terrorist groups are spreading propaganda on the Internet in
ways that might radicalize individuals to conduct attacks. Lonewolf
attacks remain a problem, but most of the plotting were seeing
these days is tied to extremist groups.Abdulwahab, an Iraqiborn
Swedish citizen who lived in London, is believed to have acted
alone on the day of the Swedish bombing. But investigators suspect
he may have been aided by al Qaeda in the planning of the attack.A
military official said al Qaedas ability to spread its message
globally through the Internet and other recruiting methods in the
West is due to our failure to dismantle the organization early and
eliminate leaders like Osama bin Laden and their teachers before
the ideology set in.Scandinavias largest news agency, TT, received
an emailed voice message from Abdulwahab 10 minutes before the
bombings, had no time to react to it, TT Foreign Editor Vicktor
Olsson told The Washington Examiner in a telephone interview from
Sweden on Monday.The voice message recorded in both Swedish and
Arabic was sent simultaneously to law enforcement, he said.This is
a historic incident for Sweden, Olsson said. We are focusing most
of our resources on it and there are many questions from the public
as to why and how this attack took place.Abulwahab had spent a
great deal of time in Britain, where he lived for some period of
time, and was traveling back and forth to Jordan, unbeknownst to
his family, Olsson said. It is believed he had contacts there as
well.The bomber had a Facebook page dedicated to Islamic extremism,
and evidence suggests that he trained in Pakistan. British
counterterrorism and lawenforcement officials are scouring his home
outside London, where his wife and children live, according to
British reports.A U.S. official with knowledge of terrorist
recruitment said that al Qaedas message has permeated the Internet.
There is active recruitment into al Qaeda both in Europe and the
United States, he said.American allies in Pakistan, Afghanistan and
elsewhere have uncovered evidence of terrorist groups using the
Internet to recruit. A Taliban detainee interviewed by The Examiner
in Pakistan earlier this year was captured transporting video,
laptop computers and other hightech equipment. He said the
equipment was to be used to draw people to jihad and to get the
Talibans side of the story out on the Web.According to a taped
message, Abdulwahab was angry at Swedens involvement in the Afghan
war and with Lars Vilks, the Swedish artist who published a series
of drawings in 2007 depicting the Prophet Muhammad as a dog.This
was all an issue of free speech in principle, but since then weve
suspected something like this has been sort of coming, Olsson
said.Stockholm Police Department spokeswoman Petra Sjoelander told
The Examiner that investigators are continuing to interview
witnesses and search for evidence.This is an ongoing investigation
and we are extending our police work, looking at every angle,
Sjoelander said.Olsson said that in Sweden, as with the rest of
Europe, it is the terrorist ideology and the lonewolf trend that
everybody is concerned about and trying to prevent before something
much worse takes place.
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