"The perception that the West is attacking Islam on multiple fronts
continues to anger the Muslim world and contributes to support for
radical views. Converts in particular are prone to extreme views
because of their new-found zeal,"
"Iraq would provide a training ground, and those coming home would be
"well-trained, highly effective, dangerous people," Judd said."


Yes indeed, CICBush43 invading Iraq has certainly made Americans safer
and less vulnerable to al-Qaeda.  Unless, of course, you add in
countless fanatic combat veterans of Iraq, well-versed in, and fully
capable of countering, U.S. military tactics as demonstrated daily in
Iraq.  

David Bier

http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_Type1&c=Article&cid=1139611813114&call_pageid=968332188854&col=968350060724

Made-in-Canada threat worries CSIS

Feb. 11, 2006. 01:00 AM

MICHELLE SHEPHARD
STAFF REPORTER

The head of Canada's spy service has called Iraq a "post-graduate
faculty for terrorism," but it's the threat from what are known as
home-grown terrorists that most worries Canadian security services.

Jim Judd, director of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service, told
the Toronto Star in an interview last year the spy agency was aware of
Canadians who had gone to Iraq to join the insurgency and was
concerned about their eventual return to Canada.

Iraq would provide a training ground, and those coming home would be
"well-trained, highly effective, dangerous people," Judd said.

However, CSIS believes fewer than 10 Canadians have gone to fight in Iraq.

A far more disturbing trend, security officials say, is what is
developing inside Canada's borders — citizens who may never have
travelled abroad but have been motivated to extremism through radical
websites and Internet chat rooms.

Prisons have become a worry for Canadian security services trying to
root out home-grown radicalism.

An internal 2004 CSIS report entitled Canadian Converts to Radical
Islam says such home-grown converts are particularly dangerous because
of their familiarity with Western society.

"The perception that the West is attacking Islam on multiple fronts
continues to anger the Muslim world and contributes to support for
radical views. Converts in particular are prone to extreme views
because of their new-found zeal," states the report, obtained under
access-to-information legislation.

The case most often cited as an example of this phenomenon involves
Mohamed Jabarah, a former St. Catharines, Ont., Catholic school
student who is now in a New York jail after reportedly pleading guilty
to terrorism charges at a secret hearing. Jabarah reportedly confessed
to acting as an intermediary between Al Qaeda and Jemaah Islamiah, a
group believed responsible for bombings in Southeast Asia, including
the Oct. 12, 2002, Bali blast that killed 202 people.

Saudi Arabian security forces killed Jabarah's older brother, Abdul
Rahman Jabarah, in 2003. The 23-year-old was accused of being one of
the key organizers of a May 2003 bombing that attacked a Riyadh
residential complex that mainly housed foreigners.

Prisons have also become a worry for security services trying to root
out radicals.

John MacLaughlan, the director of Canada's Integrated Terrorism
Assessment Centre, said in a recent interview that the "captive
audience" in prisons provides fertile ground for recruiters because of
inmates' sense of "wanting to belong to something that is bigger."

A CSIS report on the issue discusses the phenomenon in the United
States and Europe, citing the example of the so-called "shoe bomber"
Richard Reid, who converted to "radical Islam" while in a youth
detention facility. A section in the report, entitled Radical Islam in
Canadian Prisons, was censored before being released to the Star.






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