[The picture now emerging of the Islamic State’s machinations in Europe is distinct from the development
of al-Qaeda, which relied heavily in its early years on ostensibly
pious recruits and wealthy foreign sponsors. In contrast, some Islamic State
loyalists are using their illicit talents to finance recruiting rings and
travel to strongholds, posing a new kind of challenge to authorities.]
By Anthony Faiola and Souad Mekhennet
Members
of the terror network put together in
shown
in a photo from an Islamic State magazine, shared his criminal past.
(Dabiq
Magazine via AP)
|
The Islamic State is
constructing an army of loyalists from Europe that includes an increasing
number of street toughs and ex-cons as the nature of radicalization evolves in
the era of its self-proclaimed caliphate. Rather than leave behind lives of
crime, some adherents are using their illicit talents to finance recruiting
rings and travel costs for foreign fighters even as their backgrounds give them
potentially easier access to cash and weapons, posing a new kind of challenge
to European authorities.
Before he became the notorious
ringleader of last month’s terrorist attacks in Paris , for instance, Abdelhamid
Abaaoud, 28, was linked to a den of radicalized thieves led by a man nicknamed
“Santa Claus.”
The gang — including young men
who would go on to fight in Syria and Iraq — robbed tourists and
shoplifted, forming a petty-crime operation in the service of the Islamic
State, authorities say.
The picture now emerging of the
Islamic State’s machinations in Europe is distinct from the development
of al-Qaeda, which relied heavily in its early years on ostensibly
pious recruits and wealthy foreign sponsors. In contrast, some Islamic State
loyalists are using their illicit talents to finance recruiting rings and
travel to strongholds, posing a new kind of challenge to authorities.
A repeat offender
Abaaoud, the son of Moroccan
immigrants to Belgium , was a repeat offender who was
thrown out of his home at age 16. He became radicalized and left in 2013 to
fight in Syria . But even during his brief
return to Belgium later that year, he was still
committing thefts. He used the proceeds to help finance another trip to Syria in January 2014, this time
with his 13-year-old brother, Younes, according to a senior intelligence
official who debriefed an Abaaoud family member. Like other officials
interviewed, he spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the ongoing
terrorism investigation.
Abaaoud’s terrorist network in Paris , officials say, was distinct
from the Brussels petty-crime ring, which did not carry out attacks
in Europe but instead recruited fighters
and funded their transit to the Middle East . But several of the Paris attackers also had criminal
pasts. Two of them — Brahim Abdeslam, who blew himself up on Nov. 13, and his
brother, Salah Abdeslam, who is still on the run — operated a cafe in Brussels
that was shut down as
recently as August due
to drug-related activity.
A French official familiar with
the Paris investigation also said forensic testing has
uncovered traces of Captagon, a blend of amphetamine and theophylline, in the
remains of several of the dead assailants despite the prohibition on
intoxicants in Islam.
“This connection with the
criminal world was not something that you could see with [Osama] bin Laden,”
said Mohammad-Mahmoud Ould Mohamedou, deputy director of the Geneva Center for Security Policy. “You had
a certain fundamentalism within the terror.”
A low breeding ground
European jails have been
breeding grounds of Islamist radicals for years, particularly in Belgium and France . But recently, criminality and
extremism have become even more interwoven, with recruits’ illegal behavior
continuing even after they are shown “the light” of radical Islam.
“Many of them live lives as
hoodlums, had an epiphany, and turned religious, but these connections to
criminality are not meant to disappear,” said Peter Neumann, a radicalization
expert at King’s College London. “I see this as an operational aspect of the
Islamic State.”
In one example of the new
trend, a court in Cologne , Germany , has been hearing the case of
eight men suspected of
having robbed churches, schools and businesses between August 2011 and November
2014 to support Islamist fighters in Syria . In one church alone, they
allegedly stole sacred objects worth 10,000 euros. It is not yet clear what
group they were backing, but “all evidence points to the Islamic State,” said
court spokesman Achim Hengstenberg.
Few cases, though, better
highlight the apparent links between criminality and radicalization than the Brussels ring allegedly headed by Khalid
Zerkani, a 42-year-old rotund and bearded Moroccan with alleged ties to the
Islamic State.
Known to his followers as “Papa Noel” — or Santa Claus — Zerkani, authorities
say, doled out cash and presents to the wayward youths he recruited as thieves
and prospective fighters. They would target train stations and tourists,
stealing luggage, even shoplifting for their cause. The profits, officials say,
went to help cover the costs of sending recruits from Europe to the battlefields of the Middle East .
Stealing is prohibited in
Islam. But Islamic State followers have rationalized such activities by saying
that they are targeting non-believers, or that such crimes are done for
tactical purposes.
Officials say Zerkani’s alleged
network offers a glimpse into the recruiting and financing tactics used by
European-born Islamic State fighters. Zerkani, they say, has been tied to at
least 30 to 40 people who left Belgium for Syria and Iraq .
One of his recruits,
21-year-old Youssef Bouamar, told authorities that Zerkani had encouraged him
to steal luggage at train stations to finance “the Islamist cause.”
Zerkani appeared to target
those who already had petty criminal records, wooing recruits at cafes and on
the streets near unofficial mosques in Molenbeek, a Brussels neighborhood with many North
African immigrants. Mohamed Karim Haddad, whose brother was recruited to fight
in Syria , told officials that Zerkani
was “a charlatan who manipulates young men or socially awkward men, for the
wrong cause and probably for his own business.”
Belgian authorities arrested
Zerkani in February 2014 and charged him with being a leader of a terrorist
operation. He was
convicted this year and
sentenced to 12 years. He pleaded not guilty and is appealing the verdict. His
lawyer, Steve Lambert, declined to comment.
Abaaoud was very familiar with
“Papa Noel’s” world. His family lived in Molenbeek at a time when Zerkani and
his followers had become fixtures there. Abaaoud was linked to at least three
of the network’s members, according to intelligence documents, court records,
police reports and more than a dozen interviews. He was convicted in absentia
this year in the same trial as Zerkani, though authorities stopped short of
saying that the men worked together. But a text authorities found on one of
Zerkani’s cellphones appears to reference Abaaoud by his nom de guerre in Syria , Abu Omar Soussi.
One of Abaaoud’s younger brothers — Yassine Abaaoud — told authorities that his
mother had once begged him to avoid Zerkani and his entourage.
“She was scared of them because
of all the problems,” Yassine said, according to court records. “She called
them ‘the bearded guys.’ ”
A different angle to jihad
The newer jihadist groups mark
a shift, experts say, from older
organizations like al-Qaeda that
were far more strict in interpreting theology and used recruiting videos that
were often rambling 45-minute sermons from bin Laden, the scion of a wealthy
Saudi industrialist family. The Islamic State uses showy Internet propaganda to
advertise the allure of a paradise where disenfranchised youths can feel a rush
of adrenaline and enjoy the spoils of war.
“These are lower quality
terrorists,” said another senior European security official.
That hardly means they are less
dangerous. Criminal links may be allowing the newer groups’ members to more
easily source weapons and cash in Europe , experts say.
And the men’s ties to petty
criminality could have led authorities to underestimate how much of a threat
they posed.
One of Zerkani’s disciples, a
recruit named Yoni Mayne who had had run-ins with the law, left for Syria in
early 2013, according to his 68-year-old mother, who spoke on the condition of
anonymity because she feared reprisal. After a few weeks, he briefly came home.
His mother said that she asked
authorities to stop her son from returning to the Middle East, and that they
assured her they were following him.
“But then he left again and
they did nothing,” she said.
Authorities blame the limited legal tools they had available at the time.
But critics say some authorities in Belgium actually saw such departures
as a plus — a way to export the problem of young Muslim men who had engaged in
crime. Authorities now say when Mayne returned to Syria in January 2014, he did so in
the company of Abaaoud and his 13-year-old brother. Mayne, court records show,
is believed to have died fighting for the Islamic State in March 2014.
There are other links between the ringleader
of the Paris attacks and Zerkani’s inner circle. A police
search in February 2014, court records show, turned up Abaaoud’s expired
Moroccan passport in the Brussels apartment of one of Zerkani’s followers.
Officials and Muslim leaders
say Islamic State recruiters are appealing to young Muslims with criminal pasts
because they make some of the best targets. They are often angry and alienated,
like Farid, a slim, pale man in his 20s who was a friend of Abaaoud’s and
professed himself “happy” when he heard about the Paris attacks.
The son of Moroccan immigrants,
Farid, who would not give his last name to avoid being identified by police,
said he had been in and out of jail since his teenage years. During a conversation
in a smoky cafe in the Molenbeek district, he had the outline of what he called
a handgun in his pocket and produced a thick wad of euros from what he
described as illicit activity.
He described the life of young
Muslims in the district as hopeless, with many feeling stateless and
confronting unemployment rates well above the national average. Most of his
friends, he said, had done jail time.
He and other young men he
knows, he said, want to go to Syria to join the Islamic State. The
group appeals to them because it is establishing a place where Muslims like him
can finally feel at home, he said.
“We are revolting against this
state and this society that never accepted us as Belgian. We are revolting
against our parents and also their countries of origin,” he said. “I don’t feel
Belgian. I don’t feel Moroccan. I think of myself as a Muslim, and that’s how
Abdelhamid saw himself.”
Michael Birnbaum, Loveday
Morris and Annabell Van den Berghe in Brussels, Virgile Demoustier in Paris and Stephanie Kirchner in Berlin contributed to this report.
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