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Al-Qaeda issues new Sweden threat: report

An English-language online publication with links to the al-Qaeda terrorist network has paid tribute to the suicide bomber who attacked in Stockholm in December while calling for new acts of terrorism in Sweden in indirect terms.

Al-Qaeda issues new Sweden threat: report
Police inspect the body of the Stockholm suicide bomber

According to terrorism expert Magnus Ranstorp, it is a sign that Sweden has become more attractive to terrorists. The tribute to Taimour Abdulwahab is a sign that Sweden has become a more viable country to focus on, Ranstorp believes.

“Preferably, the extremists want to strike against Denmark, but the Danish security police are much more offensive and harder to target and penetrate. It’s the Madrid effect. Sweden is the soft underbelly” he told The Local on Thursday.

Abdulwahab appears a number of times in the over 60-page publication, which also includes basic information on how to produce an explosion and what the parts of an assault rifle are called.

“We are following this closely. It is a threat on an inspiration level,” Malena Rembe of the Swedish Security Service (Säkerhetspolisen, Säpo) told newspaper Svenska Dagbladet (SvD) on Thursday in reference to Inspire’s tribute to Taimour Abdulwahab in its latest issue.

Säpo added that it could be “an impetus for individuals who have already crossed the line between word and deed.”

“That he lived a comfortable life and had a wife and children did not stop Taimour Abdulwahab from responding to the call to jihad (holy war),” Inspire wrote, adding, “He carried out a martyr operation in Stockholm, Sweden, which damaged the entire EU.”

“We need more like him,” read one caption.

Revenge for the caricatures depicting the Prophet Muhammad drawn by controversial Swedish artist Lars Vilks and published by Örebrö newspaper Nerikes Allehanda in 2007 has become the common denominator of violent Islamic extremism in Sweden, SvD wrote on Thursday.

“It is time that the Swedish government rethinks its position against Islam and Muslims before the Mujahideen strike again,” warned the magazine, according to SvD.

“The Swedes seem to have set out to show its dislike of Muslims and are eager to join the league of nations that are hostile to Islam and Muslims. This operation can serve as a reminder to the Swedish government and people to reconsider their position before their list of crimes against us are too long and it is too late,” the magazine continued, SvD reported.

Following Abdulwahab’s attack, three Swedish citizens were arrested late last year after a plot to attack journalists at Copenhagen’s Jyllands-Posten, which also published the images, was uncovered by authorities.

It is not unexpected that the magazine would use Abdulwahab as an example, Ranstorp said. It was also not the first time that Sweden has cropped up in Inspire, which has previously referenced Vilks and Nerikes Allehanda’s editor-in-editor Ulf Johansson.

To be mentioned in this context is never good, Ranstorp added.

“It is an important magazine with direct links to al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula. Whatever pops up in the newspaper is serious,” he said.

Practical information on how to construct explosives at home in a mother’s kitchen are interspersed with more comprehensive interviews with leading ideologues and strategists.

The magazine’s tagline states that it is a “periodical magazine issued by the al-Qaeda Organisation in the Arabian Peninsula” and has been described targeting “aspiring jihadists in the US or UK” by the Brookings Institute.

The purpose, as the title suggests, is to inspire and its target audience are those who are curious in the West.

According to Ranstorp, the web editor is an American in his mid-20s who understands American culture and packaging and disappeared from the US earlier this year or one and a half years ago, fleeing to Yemen.

“The main focus is the US, but also Europeans, Australians and others who speak English. The Germans have had a lot of citizens go to Pakistan after they started producing a lot material in German,” said Ranstorp.

“It gives directives and can provide individuals with a extremist bent a push onto the path. Young people think this is cool, it is the ultimate form of rebellion against Western society,” he added.

The material is well packaged, easily accessible and accordingly attractive.

“One should not be fooled because it is flashy. It is serious and in terms of marketing, is ingenious,” said Ranstorp.

According to Ranstorp, the message is somewhat contradictory. Although the magazine provides advice on how to communicate securely on the internet and travel to conflict zones, it also warns against visiting jihadi training areas in order not to attract the attention of the FBI.

“There is both danger and an opportunity [for anti-terrorist agencies] since they can also track who is reading these sites and see what are these individuals thinking about, but there is no question that this is a serious threat for Sweden,” said Ranstorp.

He added that although the publication is available online, its web presence is elusive due to the threat of being shut down. Meanwhile, other jihadist websites have suspected that the magazine may be a hoax, citing its low quality.

TRAIN

Trial to begin over Paris train attack that inspired movie

A Moroccan man goes on trial in France on Monday accused of an attempted terror attack on an Amsterdam-Paris train five years ago which was foiled by passengers whose heroic actions were turned into a Hollywood film.

Trial to begin over Paris train attack that inspired movie
Off-duty US servicemen Spencer Stone and Alek Skarlatos (left and right) and their friend Anthony Sadler (centre), who helped tackle the attacker. Photo: Thomas Samson/AFP
Director Clint Eastwood, 90, is on the witness list for the trial in Paris, and it is believed his 2018 film “The 15:17 to Paris” will serve as a reconstruction of the events of August 21, 2015.
   
Ayoub El Khazzani was tackled by passengers, including two off-duty American servicemen, shortly after emerging bare-chested and heavily armed from a toilet on a Thalys high-speed train.
   
Some 150 passengers were in the carriage with him.
   
Khazzani had an AK47 slung over his back, a bag of nearly 300 rounds of ammunition, and appeared to be “in a trance”, according to a young Frenchman waiting in the passageway, and the first to try to subdue Khazzani.
   
Another passenger, a Franco-American professor, came to the Frenchman's aid, grabbing Khazzani's assault rifle.
   
The attacker took a pistol out of his belt, shot and wounded the professor and reclaimed the AK47, only to be tackled afresh and disarmed by two American soldiers — Spencer Stone and Alek Skarlatos — who heard the commotion from a neighbouring carriage.
   
The soldiers were aided by their friend Anthony Sadler, with whom they were backpacking through Europe.
 
   
Stone was slashed in the neck and on the eyebrow and almost had his thumb sliced off with a box-cutter wielded by Khazzani.
   
“He had 270 rounds of ammunition on him, enough to kill 300 people,” according to Thibault de Montbrial, the lawyer for the three Americans hoping to attend the trial at a special anti-terror court from Monday.
   
According to the lawyer, there was no doubt his clients had prevented a “mass attack.”
   
Khazzani, who joined the Islamic State group in Syria in May 2015, is charged with “attempted terrorist murder”, and will be joined in the dock by three other men accused of helping him.
   
De Montbrial said the Americans, who played themselves in Eastwood's film, wish to attend the trial because they “want to tell” their story and “look into the eyes of the man they faced”.
   
However, they may not make it to Paris due to coronavirus restrictions.
 
 
'Remain calm'
 
The Thalys assault happened in the same year as the January 2015 massacre of staff at the Charlie Hebdo satirical magazine, the killing of a policewoman, and the deadly hostage siege at the Hyper Cacher market — which left a total of 17 dead.
   
In November the same year, jihadists armed with assault rifles and explosives struck outside the national stadium, Paris cafes and the Bataclan concert hall, killing 130 people and wounding more than 350 in the deadliest peacetime attack in France's history.
   
Belgian Abdelhamid Abaaoud is believed to have been one of the masterminds behind the Thalys and November 13 attacks, as well as others in Europe, including the Brussels bombings of March 2016 that killed 32 civilians.
   
Abaaoud was killed by police in a Paris suburb five days after he shot indiscriminately at packed cafe terraces in Paris on the night of the coordinated November 13 attacks.
   
The Khazzani trial comes at a time of heightened security alert in France following three attacks blamed on jihadists in a month — a knife attack outside Charlie Hebdo's former offices, the beheading of a history teacher, and a deadly stabbing spree at a church in Nice.
   
“We must remain calm and rigorous regardless of recent tragedies,” said Lea Dordilly, a lawyer for co-accused Bilal Chatra, who was 19 at the time of the thwarted train attack.
   
He was allegedly recruited in Turkey by Abaaoud, and is suspected of being an advance scout for Khazzani in getting into Europe via the migrant trail from Syria.
   
Khazzani does not deny having boarded the train with the intent of committing an attack, but claims to have had a change of heart at the last minute, too late to avoid the confrontation with the Americans.
   
His lawyer Sarah Mauger-Poliak claims Khazzani is a changed man who has rejected radical Islamist doctrine and regrets his actions.
   
The trial is scheduled to last until December 17.
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