New York Sun
December 6, 2005
http://www.danielpipes.org/article/3184
Converts to Islam are taking over the
terrorist operations previously carried out mainly by Muslim-born immigrants
and their children.
This was dramatically illustrated when
a Belgian convert to Islam, Muriel Degauque, 38, blew herself up near Baghdad on November
9 in a suicide attack on American troops, becoming the first Christian-born
Western woman to kill herself for Islamist purposes. And of the fourteen people arrested because of connections to Degauque, half were converts
to Islam. In neighboring Holland, a just published government report
specifically worries about radicalized converts.
Islamist terror organizations
particularly prize converts. They know the local culture and blend in. They
cannot be deported. They can hide their religious affiliation by avoiding
mosques, lying low, even drinking alcohol and
taking drugs to
maintain their cover. One guide counsels would-be suicide bombers going to
Iraq to "wear jeans, eat doughnuts, and always carry your Walkman."
Converts who either carried out a terrorist
operation or were jailed come from many Western countries. Here is a partial
listing. (Converts as yet only suspected, arrested, or indicted will be listed in a separate article at my Web site, www.DanielPipes.org.)
·
Australia: British-born Jack Roche, nine years in jail for trying to bomb the
Israeli embassy in Canberra.
·
France: David Courtailler, four years for abetting terrorists. Pierre Richard Robert, life for planning terrorist attacks in
Morocco. Ruddy Teranova, three years for physically attacking a
moderate Muslim.
·
Germany: Steven Smyrek, seven years for planning a suicide mission
for Hezbollah.
·
Italy: Domenico Quaranta, twenty years for setting fire to a Milan
subway station and trying to attack ancient Greek temples in Agrigento, Sicily.
·
Netherlands: Jason Walters, the son of a black American father and a
Dutch woman, belonged to the Hofstad Network and threw a hand grenade at
police; his trial begins this week.
· United Kingdom: Germaine Lindsay, an immigrant from Jamaica, one of the London transport suicide bombers of July 2005, killing 26. Richard Reid, life for the "shoe bomber" who tried to bring down a Paris-to-Miami flight. Andrew Rowe, fifteen years for planning terrorist attacks.
·
United States: Ryan Anderson, life for trying to aid Al Qaeda while serving
as a National Guardsman. David Belfield, assassinated a former Iranian diplomat
outside Washington and fled to Iran. Clement Rodney Hampton-el, 35 years for helping bomb the World Trade
Center in 1993. Mark Fidel Kools, death sentence for "fragging" and
killing two of his army officers. John Muhammad, death sentence for his role as the lead
"Beltway Sniper." Randall Royer, twenty years for weapons and explosives
charges "stemming from the investigation into a militant jihadist network
in Northern Virginia." Five members of Jamaat ul Fuqra, a Pakistan-based group suspected of at least
thirteen murders in America, jailed for up to 69 years.
Lorenzo Vidino reports in Al Qaeda in Europe (Prometheus) that the authorities find that
"dozens of European converts have joined terrorist groups." Nor is
the problem restricted to Western converts to Islam.
·
In the Philippines, for example, one convert confessed to bombing
a ferry in February 2004, killing over 100, and others are linked to an attempt
to bomb the U.S. Embassy in Manila. More generally, the government charges that
Al-Qaeda and Jemaah Islamiyah use the Rajah Solaiman Movement, a group of converts, to carry out terror
attacks.
·
Non-Western
converts move to the West and engage in terrorism there. Consider three
American cases: Rashid Baz, born a Lebanese Druze, 141 years for
murdering a Jewish boy on the Brooklyn Bridge. Wadih el-Hage, born a Lebanese Catholic, life without parole
for his work with Osama bin Laden. John Samuel, born an Ethiopian Christian, awaits trial at
Guantánamo, accused of entering the United States to terrorize for Al
Qaeda.
The growing prominence of converts to
terrorism means that such counterterrorism tools as looking for Muslim names or excluding potential terrorists at the
border do not suffice. Instead, it is now also critical to know exactly who
converts to Islam and to watch converts to see which of them are radicalized.
Even without becoming Muslims, some of
the persons named above could have engaged in terrorism. But security in the
West, the Philippines, and elsewhere requires coming to terms with a very
awkward fact: Conversion to Islam substantially increases the probability of a
person's involvement in terrorism.
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