From the BBC:
“Islamic State group: Europe has
ticking time bomb in prison camps”
Like a bad movie where you've
already seen the ending, history now risks repeating itself in a dangerous corner
of the Middle East. Kurdish-run camps
and detention centres confining tens of thousands of Islamic State (IS)
fighters and their dependants are boiling over with frustrated rage. This month, spurred on by Turkey's incursion
into Syria and encouraged by their fugitive leadership, they have vowed to
break out and wreak revenge on both their captors and the West, reconstituting
themselves as they did in 2013. While
Turkey's actions have undoubtedly propelled this problem into a crisis - in
excess of 100 IS prisoners (some reports put the figure as high as 800) have
reportedly escaped already and are now at large - the problem goes much deeper.
The fault lies primarily with Europe's governments. Since the military defeat of IS by the US-led coalition at Baghuz in
Syria in March, the world has had seven months in which to resolve the issue of
all these beaten jihadists and their often-fanatical dependants. Most are from Syria and Iraq but both those
countries are in varying states of upheaval and the recent sentencing to death
by an Iraqi court of French jihadists has discouraged further transfers there. The hard core of die-hard IS fighters and
their dependants are nearly all from outside the region - Europe, North Africa,
Egypt, Saudi Arabia, the Caucasus and Central Asia. Recent reports from the largest camp, al-Hawl
in north-east Syria, depict an ever-increasing takeover inside its walls by IS,
including deadly punishments meted out by jihadist women. Children are growing
up without any proper education and in some cases are being brainwashed with
extreme and violent ideology. "The people there (in these camps) are very
extreme," said Michael Stephens from the London think tank Royal United
Services Institute (RUSI). "If they
escape or are allowed to keep raising children in these camps the problem in 10
years will be severe." Washington and its Kurdish allies have been
pressing Europe to take back the estimated 4,000 plus nationals who slipped
unnoticed across its borders and into Syria when IS was at its height. But Europe doesn't want them back. Its
intelligence agencies warn that many of those who survived the final days of
IS's last stand will remain highly dangerous radicals, brutalised by the
atrocities they have witnessed, and in some cases, committed. According to the
German magazine Der Spiegel, German officials believe that a third of its
nationals currently in the camps - a total of 27 men and women - are
"capable of carrying out violent acts including terrorist attacks".
This, it says, explains the German government's reluctance to bring them home. The
problem is two-fold. Firstly, there is a fear that if and when these jihadists
were eventually brought to trial in their home countries there could well be
insufficient evidence - given the fluid circumstances in which they were
captured - to convict them. Governments
would then be accused of allowing back in dangerous men and women who would go
free and then pose a potential risk to national security. Secondly, even if they were convicted they
would only add to the growing problem of violent radicalisation taking place in
European jails, where a disproportionate percentage of the prison population -
notably in France - are from Muslim communities. So the net result is that Europe has failed to
act and the problem has been left to fester. As well as dangerous jihadists,
thousands of innocent women and children have been left in limbo in these camps
where in some cases those who do not follow IS's draconian rules are getting
either indoctrinated or punished. The IS group has fallen a long way from its
self-proclaimed caliphate of 2014 It is
impossible to under-estimate the importance of "unjust imprisonment"
in jihadist psychology. It goes right back to the 1960s when the radical
Egyptian Islamist Sayyid Qutb was imprisoned and executed and his writings
later became a blueprint for jihadist thought. The assassination of Egypt's President Anwar
Sadat in 1981 was followed by the mass imprisonment of Islamists in that
country, something which became a rallying cry for their followers and which
fed into Osama Bin Laden's al-Qaeda organisation. After the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003 the
genesis of today's IS started out in the confines of the US-run Abu Ghraib and
Camp Bucca prison camps that were set up. Men like Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the group's
current leader, exchanged ideas, swapped phone numbers with other prisoners and
laid plans for an insurgency for when they got out. After eight years of
misrule by an Iraqi government that discriminated against the country's Sunni
minority, the jihadists chose their moment and swept into Mosul and northern
Iraq in 2014. The rest is history: it took another five years to dismantle
their self-proclaimed caliphate. So could the same thing happen again now?
Probably not, say experts like Michael Stephens. "The truth is that IS will struggle to
reconstitute much past a low-level insurgency, but they'll be an irritant for
years to come," he said. "A jail break would be highly worrying but
the conditions on the ground are not really conducive to them simply rushing
back in and filling vacuums in the way they did in 2013." Certainly it is
hard to see IS being able to rebuild anything like the physical, geographic
space it occupied and controlled for five years across a great swathe of Syria
and Iraq. But Dr Emman El-Badawy, who has spent years researching Islamist
extremism and who now works for the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change,
warns that IS is unlikely to pass up the opportunities now presented to it. "The
recalibration of IS is likely to be just as deadly and destructive as what we
saw in 2014-17," she said. "The group will be planting itself deeper
into weakly governed areas and establishing safe havens for recruitment and
training, fuelling instability and no doubt continuing to plot attacks abroad
including in Europe and the US." Ultimately, the problem comes down to
this. Unless there is a secure and humane resolution to the issue of those
thousands displaced by the collapse of the IS caliphate then this will be a
ticking time bomb that Europe and other parts of the world will live to regret.
^ So when (not if) ISIS regains
its former strength and takes over land and carries out more terrorist attacks
in the Middle East, in Europe and around the rest of the world it will be the
fault of: Trump, the Turks, the Russians, the Germans, the British, the French
and all the other European Governments that did not do a thing to secure the
ISIS terrorists and their families when they had the chance. The blood of the
innocent men, women and children that will be wounded or die in any future
terrorist attacks will be on them as much as it will be on ISIS. ^
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