Germany's Isis Importation Problem
In
its annual report covering 2014, the Federal Office for the Protection
of the Constitution (BfV), or the German domestic Security Service,
recently reported that some 600 German Islamists traveled to Iraq or
Syria. At least nine jihadists from Germany committed suicide attacks.
These attacks had probably been ordered by the so-called "Islamic State
in Iraq and Syria" (ISIS, also known as ISIL). The first German suicide
bomber was Robert Baum (Abu Uthman), a Muslim convert from the city of
Solingen. He blew himself up in the Syrian Province of Homs in June
2014.
Another German convert to Islam who joined ISIS was Philip
Bergner. On Facebook he put film footage of his German-Turkish friend
Mustafa Kalayci, who ostentatiously showed the severed heads of Kurdish
fighters. Bergner committed a suicide attack near Mosul, Iraq, in August
2014.
German jihadists also committed serious war crimes. Muslim
convert Denis Mamadou Gerhart Cuspert (Ghanese father, German mother)
was born in Berlin where he was known as rapper "Deso Dogg." Before his
conversion to Islam he was a petty criminal. He traveled to Syria where
he pledged allegiance to ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi in March or
April 2013. An execution video shows Cuspert picking up a severed head
and puting it on a body. Such videos call on radical Muslims in the West
to join ISIS. The U.S. Department of State designated German citizen
Denis Cuspert "a Specially Designated Global Terrorist" on February 9,
2015. "Cuspert is emblematic of the type of foreign recruits ISIL seeks
for its ranks -- individuals who have engaged in criminal activity in
their home countries who then travel to Iraq and Syria to commit far
worse crimes against the people of those countries," the State
Department observed, adding that "Cuspert has been a willing pitchman
for ISIL atrocities."
The German newspaper Die Welt reported in
October 2014 how a German ISIS jihadist who called himself Abu Dawud
made veiled threats against German Chancellor Angela Merkel and the
other Germans.
In its most recent annual report the German
Security Service warns against "the substantial security threat posed by
those German jihadists who were trained in terrorist training camps and
actively participated in the fight in Syria and Iraq." This threat is
ever so real when they return to Germany and commit terrorist attacks,
as suicide bombers for example. The report quotes the online IS
propaganda magazine "Dabiq" of October 12, 2014, which explicitly refers
to Germany as a target for terrorist attacks. Several German ISIS
jihadists also announced that such attacks may occur soon.
The
same report describes how conflicts and anti-Semitism are being imported
from the Middle East. During Israel's offensive against Hamas in Gaza
in the summer of 2014, Hamas sympathizers in Germany were chanting
anti-Semitic slogans such as "Kill the Jews!" "Hamas, Hamas, Jews to the
gas!" And in the German city of Essen a mob of 200 angry Muslims
attacked people who were demonstrating against anti-Semitism in July
2014. The police who had to protect the peaceful demonstrators were also
attacked by these militant Muslims and their ilk. On other occasions
Jews and synagogues were attacked as well.
There were several violent clashes between Salafists and Kurdish immigrants in Germany.
The
latest annual report of the German Security Service estimates that
there are at least 43,890 radical Muslims in Germany, about 7,000
so-called Salafists among them. The ultra-conservative Salafists provide
a fertile soil for terrorist recruiters from al-Qaeda and ISIS. The
number of al-Qaeda and ISIS sympathizers in Germany is not exactly
known, but their number is growing fast. There are probably thousands
now in the country. It is impossible to monitor all of them. And things
are going to get worse very soon.
Eurostat, Europe's most
authoritative bureau of statistics, recently reported: "In 2014 by far
the highest number of asylum seekers from outside the EU-28 was reported
by Germany (203,000)." It is expected that about 750,000 asylum seekers
from Syria, Iraq, Somalia, Sudan, Nigeria, Mali, Senegal, Eritrea,
Libya, Kosovo, Albania, Afghanistan and Pakistan will have applied for
asylum in Germany by the end of 2015, among them probably tens of
thousands of radical Muslims and anti-Semites with links to the Muslim
Brotherhood, Hamas, Hezbollah, al-Shabab, the Taliban, al-Qaeda or ISIS.
Many of those who apply for asylum in Germany do so successfully.
Criminal migrant traffickers and Muslim terrorists know this quite well.
A
21-year Moroccan asylum, "A.M.," seeker was recently arrested in the
asylum seeker's center of Ludwigsburg (near the German city of
Stuttgart). Together with "S.C.C.," a Spanish female convert to Islam,
A.M. reportedly recruited jihadists for ISIS. He and this Spanish covert
to Islam were also very active in Spain. But A.M. decided to travel to
Germany in 2015 where he applied for asylum. He was using a false name
and hoped that he would be safe in Germany. Migrant traffickers in the
Middle East and North Africa often sell passports of asylum seekers to
ISIS terrorists who could then be smuggled into Europe or travel from
one European country to another. It was at the request of the Spanish
authorities that A.M. was arrested. Alert criminal investigators in
Stuttgart also played a vital role in discovering the real identity of
this fake asylum seeker.
This case clearly illustrates how ISIS operatives in Europe do not hesitate to apply for asylum in Germany.
A
massive influx of people from non-Western backgrounds, especially when
they are Muslims from countries such as Syria, Iraq, Iran and
Afghanistan, poses a direct threat to Europe's own security. We in
Europe are then importing the conflicts and the anti-Semitism prevalent
in the Muslim world. Moreover, today's mass immigration directly
threatens our Judeo-Christian and humanistic identity and tradition. Too
many Muslim immigrants in Germany, France and Sweden are angry and
frustrated and dependent on welfare. Most anti-Semitic attacks are
perpetrated by Muslims. That is why German society cannot cope with an
additional influx of nearly 800,000 Muslim immigrants in 2015.
Saturday, August 22, 2015
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