Posted on 10/23/2003 1:31:35 AM PDT by kattracks
Canada's intelligence service has warned police that members of one of the deadliest terrorist groups in the Middle East may try to infiltrate Canada to set up a support base, a newly released report reveals.The report says the discovery of a Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) fundraising network in Florida "raises the possibility of PIJ elements crossing the border to develop a similar infrastructure in Canada." It also claims Iran and Syria have provided money, training and safe haven to the radical Palestinian group, responsible for a wave of suicide bombings in Israel.
Marked "For Police and Security Officials' Use Only," the Canadian Security Intelligence Service document was released to the National Post under Access to Information. The report is dated May, 2003, three months after the Post reported that Islamic Jihad had tried to obtain a fraudulent visa so its treasurer, Muhammed Tasir Hassan Al-Khatib, could come to Canada.
The Islamic Jihad has long collected and laundered money in Canada to finance Palestinian violence.
However, the report suggests there are concerns that, under pressure in the United States, the group might go the next step and try to build a network north of the border.
The PIJ would hardly be the first terror group to do so.
An estimated 50 terror outfits already have a presence in the country, which they use as a hideout and a base for fundraising, propaganda and planning attacks.
Islamic Jihad agreed to a ceasefire last summer but has since resumed attacks against Israelis. On Monday, an Israeli F-16 fighter jet fired missiles at the home of a senior leader of the organization but missed its target.
The CSIS report described Islamic Jihad as a Gaza-based Muslim fundamentalist organization that has been killing Israeli civilians and security forces since September, 1986.
"PIJ attacks have included, but are not limited to, assaults with knives, axes, grenades, car bombs, and, particularly after 1994, the use of suicide bombers," the CSIS report says.
Islamic Jihad directs its violence at Israelis, but has also conducted an attack in Egypt and threatened to target South Korea over the country's participation in the Iraq war. It also said it would kill Norwegian observers monitoring the failed Oslo peace accords.
During a recent visit to Canada, Amr Moussa, Secretary-General of the Arab League, denied that Middle Eastern countries were providing any support whatsoever to Palestinian terrorist groups.
But the CSIS report shows that while the Islamic Jihad hard-core membership consists of no more than 200 fighters in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, it depends on an international support structure for money, weapons and training.
One of the group's founders, Fathi Shaqaqi, admitted the PIJ "received Iranian funds and that money and equipment had been transferred to the occupied territories to finance terror operations and to support the families of PIJ activists."
The group also gets "limited logistical support from Syria," CSIS said. "In 1997, it was assessed that Syria provided various terrorist organizations, including the PIJ, with safe haven in Lebanon's Bekaa Valley."
In addition, Islamic Jihad built a North American support network that, until recently, was based in Florida, where university professor Ramadan Shallah ran a front organization called the World and Islamic Studies Institute (WISE).
Sami al-Arian, another Florida professor involved in WISE, was arrested this year. Court documents filed by U.S. investigators at the time alleged that an unnamed Canadian-based Islamic Jihad operative moved thousands of dollars from accounts here to fund the PIJ.
The Islamic Jihad is one of 31 terrorist groups outlawed by Cabinet order. Critics argue the Liberal government is not doing enough to stop terrorists from using Canada as base for supporting worldwide violence.
Some former intelligence officials want Ottawa set up a foreign intelligence service like the CIA. Last Friday, Ward Elcock, the CSIS Director, revealed that CSIS was already heavily involved in covert foreign spy missions, which he said had become "an integral part of the service's operations."
Heck, they probably can get free meals, housing and a meeting hall up there by just declaring their intentions!
No to both. I've been to London, Ontario, if that counts.
Nowhere in the Bible have I ever found "the Dajjal" nor "the Dajjal" being noted as a metaphor for "Western Civ."
It strikes me as funny that the "Mahdi" and the "Dajjal" didn't even make the cut to get mentioned in the Koran. All the references to them are in the Hadith.
According to Prof. David Cook, the expert in the field of Islamic Millennialism, up until around 1980, all the mullahs preached very literally the classical description of the Dajjal as this giant with one blind eye who would nearly conquer the world by force here and seduction there. Cook says that somewhere around 1980, though, many imams began to treat the description of the concept of the Dajjal more as a symbol for the influence of Western culture throughout the globe. Cook says that books describing the Dajjal as the Western nations have been on Middle East best seller lists.
I have come upon a scarce few people in the last two years who knew enough about Islam to be conversant in their End Time beliefs, but none of them had any idea that mullahs were identifying the Dajjal with Western culture. All they knew was the classical, literal, "one-eyed giant" description of the Dajjal, like in those "monster" drawings in an earlier post. Thus, they don't see any connection between the Muslim millennial beliefs and the terrorism going on right now.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.