Thursday, September 06, 2007

Germany Hunts Al Qaeda Cells

In the past two days, we have the arrests of active terror cells in Norway, Denmark, and Germany. The suspects in Germany had an attack planned which officials called "massive" and "imminent."

It looks like Al Qaeda has something big planned, a multinational attack, here in the days leading up to the sixth anniversary of Sept. 11th.

This Sept. 11th is the first 9/11 since 2001 when the fateful date falls again on a Tuesday. It would seem that this means something to Al Qaeda, and they hope to repeat it.

In other words, I believe it is likely they have something planned for us for next Tuesday.


And today comes word that Germany is searching for ten more suspects:


Germany searching for 10 terror suspects
By MELISSA EDDY, Associated Press Writer 42 minutes ago

German authorities were searching Thursday for about 10 suspected supporters of an Islamic group linked to al-Qaida believed to have assisted three militants arrested for plotting imminent attacks against Americans in Germany, an official said.

Authorities believed "some 10" further suspects provided support to the two German converts and a Turkish citizen who were arrested Tuesday, August Hanning, a top security official, told the ARD broadcaster.

"This is the network that we are aware of at the moment," Hanning said, adding that authorities believe the splintered cell — which includes more converted Germans, Turks and other citizens — no longer poses a direct security threat.

The three arrested suspects had military-style detonators and enough material to make bombs more powerful than those that killed 191 people in Madrid in 2004 and 52 commuters in London two years ago, prosecutors said Wednesday.

"We were able to succeed in recognizing and preventing the most serious and massive bombings," German Federal Prosecutor Monika Harms said at a news conference Wednesday. She declined to name specific targets.

In Washington, a senior U.S. State Department official said German investigators had determined the Frankfurt International Airport and the nearby U.S. Ramstein Air Base were the primary targets of the plot, but that those arrested may have also been considering strikes on other sites, particularly facilities associated with the U.S.

The official spoke on condition of anonymity to describe discussions between U.S. and German intelligence agencies.

Germany's announcement was the second in two days that a major attack had been foiled in Europe, after Danish authorities arrested eight alleged Islamic militants with links to senior al-Qaida terrorists.

The German raids were launched after an intense, six-month investigation by 300 officers, who followed the suspects so closely that, at one point, police stealthily substituted a harmless alternate for the raw bomb material the suspects had collected, according to prosecutors.

German and U.S. officials have been increasingly on edge after Islamist attacks on German troops in Afghanistan, fearing an attack at home, and security measures had been increased.

Germany's elite GSG-9 anti-terrorist unit arrested two of the suspects Tuesday at a vacation home in Oberschledorn, a town of some 900 people in central Germany. A third suspect fled through a bathroom window, but was caught about 300 yards away, authorities said.

The suspects were brought before a judge in closed-door sessions Wednesday at the Federal Court of Justice in Karlsruhe, and were ordered held pending trial.

Prosecutors said the three — whom they identified only as Fritz Martin G., 28, Adem Y., 28, and Daniel Martin S., 21 — had first come to the attention of law enforcement when one or more of them carried out surveillance of U.S. military facilities in Hanau, near Frankfurt, in late 2006.

Over the course of the next six months, authorities observed them gathering a dozen containers of 35 percent hydrogen peroxide solution, which officials said can easily be combined with other material to make explosives.

Police decided to move in when the suspects began moving some of the containers and acquiring other equipment used to make bombs.

Prosecutors said the three had undergone training at camps in Pakistan run by the Islamic Jihad Union, and had formed a German cell of the al-Qaida-influenced group.

They described the Islamic Jihad Union as a Sunni Muslim group based in Central Asia that was an offshoot of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, an extremist group with origins in that country.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Vee haf vays...

"Standard columnist hails repression of Muslims in Germany

"In the London Evening Standard (5 September 2007) Anne McElvoy expresses her admiration for the repressive methods pursued by Angela Merkel's government in response to the threat of terrorism:

"Germany has a different approach to its Muslim immigrants than Britain. There is less emphasis on a 'hearts and minds' campaign; her hardline interior minister Wolfgang Schauble ended up in constitutional hot water for suggesting that if a suspected terrorist was wrongly killed, it was preferable to risking the wider loss of innocent life....

"What is striking is the difference in tone. The vast efforts of the Government in Britain since the first bomb attacks have gone into improving community relations, attempting to find Muslim leaders who can separate potential extremists from the mainstream. Mr Brown has reversed some of the more confrontational Blairite policies, like the ostracism of the Muslim Council of Britain. Borderline organisations like Hizb ut-Tahrir remain unbanned.

"In Germany and France, facing increasingly agitated Muslim populations, this would be unthinkable. Vast numbers of suspects are kept under the equivalent of control orders, deportations of troublemakers are more swift and frequent.... Germany, as one senior minister told me recently, does not believe in a 'softly softly' solution. 'Look where that got you', he said."

From

http://www.islamophobia-watch.com/islamophobia-watch/2007/9/5/standard-columnist-hails-repression-of-muslims-in-germany.html

Anonymous said...

Yup. We're a real soft touch. Soon as government tries to make progress, such as increasing detention periods for suspected terrorists - the liberal left scream racist! against human rights! et al ad nauseum.

They also lie, and say that for example 28 days without charge would be the longest in the western world... Which is bollocks since in France the time is effectively indefinite! Some are kept for years.

Pastorius said...

Jonz,
Is France the most duplicitous nation on Earth, or what?