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Politics : Don't Blame Me, I Voted For Kerry -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: American Spirit who wrote (17633)4/24/2004 3:20:47 PM
From: lorneRead Replies (2) | Respond to of 81568
 
as. Read and understand the magnitude of the coalition of countries that the Bush administration has managed to put/pull together in the war against islam terror.

There have been people on this thread that have complained that the US troops were pulled out of Afghanistan when they should have stayed to fight islam terror. One poster even suggested that the 130,000 troops in Iraq could be better used fighting islam terror.

The troops in Iraq are ridding the world of many many muslims terrorists stupid enough to go there and die for the islam terror cause.

islam terror will be defeated the way President Bush is now doing it. A coalition of countries finding and killing islam terrorists and I'm happy that you in particular will truly upset by the success of G W Bush.

Even you with your limited capacity for basic understanding should be able to grasp what is happening in the world. And people like you think Prez bush had not consulted with other countries.

Global sweep: al-Qaida, other cells raided across Europe, Mideast, Asia
By MATT MOORE
April 23, 2004
cnews.canoe.ca
STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) - Police and intelligence agents have raided suspected terror cells from Amman to Stockholm in a global sweep to thwart al-Qaida and other attacks on major targets - from U.S. embassies in the Middle East and Asia and American forces in Iraq to shopping malls in Manila and possibly a soccer stadium in Manchester.

Lightning arrests of accused militants in Sweden and Britain this week and the killing of four accused bomb plotters in Jordan - with tipoffs from U.S. authorities - show anti-terror co-operation spreading along with stepped-up pressure on Islamic extremists after the Madrid bombings.

In Saudi Arabia, the heart of Islam, security and intelligence forces have played a deadly cat-and-mouse game, arresting or killing dozens of suspected al-Qaida militants since suicide attacks killed 51 people in Riyadh last year. Saudi police and security forces also have died.

Five militants were captured this week after a suicide car bomb strike in the capital, Riyadh, killed six people - including the bomber - and injured close to 150, gutting the seven-storey General Security building. On Friday, authorities said five terror suspects, including two on Saudi Arabia's most-wanted list, were killed in shootouts that spread over two days.

The explosion came days after Saudi authorities seized three booby-trapped SUVs loaded with more than four tonnes of explosives, abandoned by militants involved in an April 12 shootout with security forces. Five more cars were seized earlier this week.

Governments around the world have increased co-operation to disrupt terror attacks in the wake of the March 11 train bombings that killed 191 people in Madrid. The crackdown also comes ahead of such high-profile events as the 2004 European soccer championships, royal weddings in Denmark and Spain next month and the Olympics in Greece this summer.

From the militant end, there's no apparent sign of international co-ordination, although al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden has issued several audio- and videotapes encouraging his followers to strike the West.

The law enforcement sweeps encompass some places not normally considered hotbeds of Islamic terror activity - such as Sweden.

"There has been a realization that the support networks - not the operations figures, the people who might do something - are here," said Magnus Norell, a terrorism expert with the Swedish Defence Research Agency. "It's the people who are involved in the financing and, to a small extent, the recruiting and propaganda."

Swedish authorities said the four men arrested Monday were suspected of helping arrange attacks on U.S. forces in Iraq. Intelligence officials in Norway said one 28-year-old suspect lived there until 2002 and had ties to Ansar al-Islam, the Kurdish guerrilla group linked to al-Qaida.

The arrests surprised many in this placid Scandinavian country, which didn't support the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq and has been historically neutral since 1814. But intelligence officials told The Associated Press that Sweden could be an attractive location as a centre for terrorist support groups co-ordinating attacks outside of Europe.

In Britain, police arrested 10 people in anti-terrorist raids but refused to comment on media reports that the arrests thwarted a suicide attack on targets including the Manchester United soccer stadium. The suspects were of North African and Iraqi-Kurdish origin.

Dozens of suspected Islamic militants have been picked up for questioning in similar raids in France, Spain and Morocco.

The arrest of six Moroccans in France in April - in connection with bombings in Casablanca in 2003 that killed 33 bystanders and 12 bombers - underscores France's co-operation with Morocco.

Those arrests may also signal a heightened aggressiveness among French authorities in the aftermath of the Madrid bombings.

France, which endured terrorist bombings in the mid-1980s and 1990s, is regarded as one of the toughest European countries in pursuing radical groups. But the country's high number of North African immigrants also make it a prime recruiting ground and base for secret cells.

Suspects nabbed in the April arrests may have ties to the Moroccan Islamic Combatant Group, an alleged al-Qaida-affiliated organization blamed by the Spanish government in the Madrid rail attacks.

Spain has arrested more than 20 suspects and has issued international warrants for more. At least five prime suspects are believed to have been among the seven alleged terrorists who blew themselves up as police moved to arrest them in the Madrid district of Leganes on April 3.

In the Philippines, six suspected members of the al-Qaida-linked Abu Sayyaf were arrested in March with about 35 kilograms of TNT after Filipino and U.S. intelligence agents struck before they could launch any attack.

The six allegedly confessed to plotting the bombings of the U.S. and Israeli embassies in Manila, along with shopping malls and oil depots.

Middle East counterterrorism officials in Jordan told AP that they have worked with U.S., Egyptian, Israeli and Saudi officials to monitor terrorists and arrest them before they can strike.

On Tuesday, Jordanian police killed four men believed to have links to an al-Qaida cell that plotted simultaneous bombing and chemical attacks against the U.S. Embassy in Amman and other targets.

Authorities said they disrupted the plot with the arrests of several suspects in two raids in late March and early April.

One challenge for counterterrorism officials is penetrating large immigrant populations in Europe where militants can blend in, including France, Britain, and Germany - site of Sept. 11, 2001, planning.

Immigrant communities are smaller in the Nordic countries, but many abroad think of them as safe havens because of the region's openness to refugees and respect for human rights. Sweden's Muslim population is nearly 300,000 among the country's nine million residents.

A look at recent arrests of suspected terrorists:

BRITAIN: 10 people of North African and Kurdish origin arrested Monday in and around Manchester amid media reports they planned to blow up Manchester United soccer stadium.

FRANCE: Six Moroccans arrested in April in connection with 2003 bombings in Casablanca that killed 33, along with 12 bombers.

JORDAN: Four men suspected of having ties to al-Qaida killed by police after investigators deterred simultaneous bomb and chemical plots against U.S. Embassy and other targets. Officials said planned attacks could have killed 20,000 people and levelled parts of the capital, Amman. Authorities said plot foiled with arrests of several suspects in two raids in late March and early April.

SAUDI ARABIA: Five militants captured after suicide car bomb detonates in Riyadh, killing six people, including bomber, and destroying government building. On Friday, five terror suspects - two on government's most-wanted list - killed in shootouts over two days. Saudi authorities arrested or killed dozens of alleged al-Qaida militants since suicide attacks killed 51 people in Riyadh last year. Police and security forces also have died.

SWEDEN: Four men - two from Iraq, two of Lebanese origin - arrested for alleged links with terror groups outside Europe.

SPAIN: More than 20 suspects arrested in March 11 Madrid train bombings that killed 191 people; international warrants issued for more. At least five prime suspects believed among seven alleged terrorists who blew themselves up as police moved to arrest them in Madrid, April 3.

PHILIPPINES: Six suspected members of al-Qaida-linked Abu Sayyaf arrested in March with about 35 kilograms TNT. Suspects allegedly confessed to plotting bombings of U.S. and Israeli embassies in Manila, shopping malls and oil depots.