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Al Qaeda's Creeping
Reconquista
Steven Brooke
The Madrid bombings had been counting down for years.
The attacks call attention to the European Islamist
terror network which has only gotten stronger with the
Iraq war.
That the Madrid bombings toppled a government which
supported the U.S. in Iraq was not an accident. Spurred
by the carnage of “11-M,” Spaniards took to the polls
and handed the terrorists a victory. They conceded that
their policies towards the wider world would be shaped
by acts of terror. To think that a country can avoid
the wrath of Al-Qaeda simply by keeping a low profile is
disingenuous at best, deadly at worst. Al-Qaeda is
pledged to an all out global jihad, waged until the
world is completely subordinated to their brand of
Islam. Keeping one’s head down and consigning security
to an assumed quid pro quo with Al-Qaeda is to
invite disaster.
Al-Qaeda has an extensive presence in
Spain
dating from well before 9/11.
Spain in particular
is set firmly in Al-Qaeda’s crosshairs because Al-Qaeda
sees Spain, or al Andalus, as historically Muslim
territory. Muslims held Spain from the 8th
century until they were vanquished by the reconquista
in 1492. For this reason the fatwas and
proclamations of Al-Qaeda frequently include references
to al Andalus alongside more prominent battle
zones such as Kashmir
and
Palestine.
As in Italy and France, Spain’s proximity to North
Africa has allowed a significant Muslim immigrant
population, both legal and illegal, to take root. These
immigrants are mainly young men who find jobs as
itinerant laborers in construction or agriculture and
second generation citizens who find their upward
mobility blocked. These individuals have not wanted to
or not been able to assimilate into their new
countries. Young, poor, and living on the margins of
European societies, these young men are increasingly
receptive to radical ideas propagated by imams or older
members of the community with an Islamist bent. These
communities also provide cover and support for
operatives arriving from abroad.
The Immigration and National Security Program at the
Nixon Center
has compiled verifiable data on 212 individuals
implicated in major terrorist attacks since the 1993
World
Trade
Center bombing. Within this data we have uncovered a
significant Spanish presence. 11 of 212 operatives used
Spain as a home base. The majority were linked to Imad
Eddin Barakat Yarkas, aka Abu Dahdah, a naturalized
Spanish citizen of Syrian origin. Arrested in 2001,
Yarkas was the alleged ringleader of the “Abu Dahdah
Cell,” a Spanish fundraising and recruiting cell.
Yarkas, who lived in a Madrid suburb, is alleged to be
bin Laden’s point man in Spain. Abu Dahdah’s passport
was found in the home of Abu Qatada, a London imam
described as Al-Qaeda’s spiritual emissary to Europe.
Investigators believe Yarkas was Abu Qatada’s
operational counterpart. Two of the Moroccans held in
connection with the
Madrid
attacks, Mohammed Shawi (or Chaoui) and Jamal Zougam,
were reportedly known to authorities. In early 2001,
Shawi’s name was picked up through monitoring one of Abu
Dahdah’s phone calls. Prior to the Madrid bombings,
Zougam was also noted by the Spanish government as a
follower of Abu Dahdah.
Besides the extensive role played by the Abu Dahdah
cell, there are numerous other episodes that illustrate
the prominent role played by Spain in Al-Qaeda’s
operations. In June of 2001, Mohammed Bensakhria, aka
“Meliani” was arrested in
Alicante,
in southeastern
Spain.
Bensakhria, described at that time as “The Most Wanted
Terrorist in
Europe,” was
the leader of the “Meliani Cell,” a group of Algerians
who plotted to bomb the Strausborg Cathedral and
Christmas Market. In January and July of 2001, Mohammed
Atta visited Spain, where he is believed to have met
with Al-Qaeda leadership and finalized plans for the
attacks on New York and Washington. Abu Dahdah set up
the meeting. When suspected Al-Qaeda operative Ghasoub
al-Abrash Ghalyoun was caught in Spain in 2002,
officials found videos of the World
Trade
Center which they described as “target spotting.”
Spanish officials are holding two men, Enrique Cerda
Ibanez and Ahmed Ruksar, on suspicion of financing the
2002 bombing of a synagogue on the Tunisian resort
island of
Djerba,
Tunisia. In 2003
Spain-based al Jazeera cameraman Taysir Alluni
was placed under investigation for allegedly using his
journalism credentials to pass information between
Al-Qaeda commanders in the Middle East and cells in
Europe.
Perhaps presaging the attacks in
Madrid, Spanish
authorities have spent the past weeks rounding up large
numbers of North Africans suspected of ties to Islamist
terrorist groups.
While ETA may still be the culprit, an Al-Qaeda- ETA
connection is still a remote possibility. Luis Jose Galan Gonzalez, held in the investigation into the Abu
Dahdah cell, is a convert to Islam who was a member of
ETA before he cast his lot with Islamist terrorists.
The explosive used in the Madrid attacks was a type
favored by ETA in the past, and it is not inconceivable
that Islamist radicals may have acquired the explosives
through liaison with radical or splinter ETA entities.
The attacks in Spain also have disturbing connections to
a wider European trend. Jamal Zougam, the Moroccan
held in connection with the attacks, had ties to Ansar
Al-Islam, the Kurdish group situated in Northern Iraq.
During last year authorities in Europe
uncovered massive Ansar al Islam recruiting operations
in Britain,
Italy, Germany, Norway and Spain. Abu Musab al Zarqawi,
the shadowy leader of Al-Ansar, focused his efforts on
recruiting converts to Islam and developing sleeper
cells.
If the bombings in Spain prove to be the work of
Al-Qaeda, it merely understates the growing threat
European-based Islamist terrorism has become. Our
intelligence and immigration authorities must take this
as a wake up call and acknowledge the role Spain, but
more importantly Europe,
plays in Al-Qaeda’s operations.
Steven Brooke is a
Program Assistant for the Immigration and National
Security Program at the Nixon Center. He provided
research assistance to Dr. Robert Leiken, who recently
released a study, “Bearers of Global Jihad? Immigration
and National Security after 9/11.”
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