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Europe
EU fails to curb terrorism within its borders
2005-06-06
One year after the Madrid bombings, little has improved in the European Union in terms of practical cooperation in combating terrorism. EU governments are reluctant to share sensitive intelligence and recently decided to restrict the role of Eurojust, the judicial cooperation agency, in the fight against terrorism.

This failure by the EU to coordinate investigations into terrorist crimes is ominous, since the global jihadist movement - including its most prominent component, Al Qaeda - is demonstrably active throughout Europe. The Sept. 11 attacks were planned in Hamburg. After the train bombs in Madrid that killed nearly 200 people, strings of terrorist cells were unraveled from Spain to Scandinavia.

One such organization is Ansar al-Islam, responsible for hundreds of attacks against civilians in Iraq. Ansar al-Islam helped Abu Musab al-Zarqawi establish an underground railroad, for bringing radicals to Iraq through Europe, Turkey and Syria. Even peaceful Scandinavia, hardly a primary target for international terrorist attacks, has been used as a staging ground for political violence. The Nordic countries have individually sought to grapple with terrorist activists residing within their borders, with varying degrees of success.

In May, a Stockholm court sentenced two Ansar members to prison sentences of six and seven years for preparing terrorist crimes. The prosecutor maintained that they were active participants in the Ansar al-Islam network and guilty of sending $148,000 to fund an attack that killed more than 100 people in Erbil in northern Iraq. The court also decided to expel them for life after their terms.

Ansar's founder, Mullah Krekar, has lived for years as a refugee in Norway, where he has been charged with several terrorism-related crimes but subsequently acquitted.

The radical fundamentalist organization Hizb-ut-Tahrir, banned as a terrorist group in Germany, has sunk roots in Denmark, where it reportedly recruits among young immigrant teens and distributes violent anti-Semitic leaflets.

In Sweden, the global terrorist threat and the discovery of radical Islamic organizations have prompted the largest overhaul of civil-military relations since the 1930s. Remarkably, the Swedish military would at present not be allowed by law to respond to terrorist attackers, while the police simply lack adequate resources to withstand a large attack.

This curious state of affairs - a total ban on the military's use of force in the domestic arena - dates from 1931, when soldiers shot and killed five political protesters in Adalen, a town in northern Sweden. The deaths had a powerful impact on the national consciousness; so powerful, in fact, that modern Sweden was left without a credible defense against terrorist attacks. This is bound to change: Sweden's defense minister declared in January that the military will have a role to play in fighting terrorism, without specifying under what circumstances.

Looking ahead, we need to consider what will happen when jihadist fighters return to Europe from Iraq. The U.S. State Department has warned that foreign fighters are transforming the insurgency in Iraq into a training ground and an indoctrination center for jihadists from around the world. In the months and years ahead, a large number of young men who went to Iraq as volunteers could return to Europe as full-fledged guerilla fighters with experience in urban terrorist operations.

Counterterrorism authorities across Europe have started to note an increase in both the number of recruits, as well as in the number of people returning home to develop networks and patiently plan for attacks, according to Magnus Norell of the Swedish defense research agency. Only time will tell if individual European governments and the EU have done enough to ward off the blight of international terrorism within Europe's borders.

(Cecilia Wikstrom is a Swedish member of Parliament and the Swedish Liberal Party's spokeswoman on Middle East affairs.)
Posted by:too true

#12  Deacon,

Already done. Tell Sgt. H. that a) whatever doesn't destroy him makes him stronger, b) there are too many other good women out there to spend his life with that tramp, and c)better he finds out now than after he's got a couple of kids and she can milk him for child support to maintain her shackup's crack habit. The man's a warrior. Things WILL get better for him, and they'll improve with every minute away from that slut.
Posted by: mac   2005-06-06 23:31  

#11  Wooo! I'll second the ladies for fear of incurring their wrath lol :-)
Posted by: Frank G   2005-06-06 20:37  

#10  I second Barbara's motion. And please tell him we think he's wonderful and appreciate him, even if the bitch is a consummate fool. Oh, and may I hope that her hell is here on earth, so she doesn't have to wait for the afterlife to get hers?
Posted by: trailing wife   2005-06-06 20:32  

#9  Deacon, is it OK if I just hope the bitch gets hers and rots in Hell?
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2005-06-06 19:42  

#8  My fellow reenactor, Sgt. Harvey, is back in country from Iraq. He called me on Sunday and wanted to talk over a few things. He was feeling a bit guilty about having killed Jihadis (4 confirmed) but I think He knows deep down he did the right thing. The other thing that is bothering him his wife left him the day he got back. She moved in with some guy she's been shaking up with and it really tore him up. She cleaned out the savings and is 6 months behind on the mortgage payments. I told him to call any time of night or day if he needed to talk. I went 2 weeks ago and "kidnapped" his horse because she was trying to sell it. To go through what he did for the last year and come home to that is beyond belief. This might not be the place but I would ask you all to say a kind word to your deity of choice for him. He is a kind, decent man.
Posted by: Deacon Blues   2005-06-06 19:03  

#7  Or elect them to office...
Posted by: Pappy   2005-06-06 18:26  

#6  Looking ahead, we need to consider what will happen when jihadist fighters return to Europe from Iraq.

Seeing how this is Europe, they'll probably make them all mailmen...
Posted by: tu3031   2005-06-06 15:45  

#5  A large number may have gone to Iraq, but I don't think a large number are gonna come back.....
Posted by: Uleash Spimp1170   2005-06-06 15:39  

#4  I would hope that it's in it's Nano Case. Never leave any fine stringed instrument except a bagpipe to face raw air.
Posted by: Shipman   2005-06-06 13:46  

#3  Where's my nano-violin?
Posted by: gromgoru   2005-06-06 13:29  

#2  This is what happens when you give those animals more rights than ordinary citizens. This is what the liberals would have in the States if they had their way. Europeans just can't seem to get it through their heads. This is a war you better start playing to win.
Posted by: bigjim-ky   2005-06-06 11:10  

#1   a large number of young men who went to Iraq as volunteers could return to Europe

Not bloody likely! But if it spurs the Europeans to necessary action now, I'm willing to be too polite to contradict Ms. Wikstrom and her friends for the moment.
Posted by: trailing wife   2005-06-06 11:06  

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