RTSat, 20 Feb 2016 22:12 UTC
© Jason Lee / Reuters
Between 3,000 and 5,000 so-called 'foreign fighters' -
EU citizens trained in Islamic state terror camps - have returned to Europe and pose a "completely new challenge," according the continent's top police chief.
"Europe is currently facing the highest terror threat in more than in a decade," Rob Wainwright, Europol's director,
told the
Neue Osnabrücker Zeitung daily, warning of the real possibility of Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) or other terror groups attacks in Europe.
"We can expect [IS] or other religious terror groups to stage an attack somewhere in Europe with the aim of achieving mass casualties among the civilian population," he said, noting that the risk of attacks by individuals has also not diminished.
However, Wainwright refused to link the unprecedented increase in the terror threat with the ongoing refugee crisis. He refuted the widespread assumption that terrorists are infiltrating Europe under the guise of asylum seekers.
"
There are no concrete indications that terrorists are systematically using the stream of refugees to come into Europe undetected," Wainwright said.
Last month, former UK Defense Secretary Liam Fox expressed concern that jihadists could sneak into the EU among asylum-seekers. Southern European countries through which they trave l"have no idea whether these people are genuine refugees or asylum seekers, or economic migrants, or terrorists operating under the cover of either," he said.
These worries were substantiated after the German domestic intelligence service confirmed in February that
it had received more than 100 tip-offs alleging IS militants had arrived in the country pretending to be refugees. The news prompted further debate on EU migration policy.
Last year, FBI Director James Comey confirmed to the US Senate committee that Islamic State terrorists had
obtained at least one printing machine used to provide militants with authentic-looking Syrian passports. The machine is believed to have been seized by terrorists during an IS offensive on the city of Deir ez-Zour. The revelation sparked concerns that large amounts of forged IDs can be manufactured in IS-controlled territories.
Two fraudulent Syrian passports were found at the site of the Paris attacks, which claimed the lives of 130 people in November. They are believed to belong to suicide bombers, who arrived in Europe via refugee routes.
In February, the FSB (Russian security agency) captured 14 gang members who were forging passports for Islamic extremists heading to Syria and planning to conduct terrorist and extremist activities in Russia.
According to a report on global terrorism from the Institute of Economics and Peace, since the start of the military conflict in Syria in 2011 between 25,000 and 30,000 'foreign fighters' have arrived in Iraq and Syria, with Europe accounting for 21 percent of the total number.
Comment: Undoubtedly some ISIS-trained fighters have entered Europe with the refugees. (Probably a relatively low number, however.) But Wainwright is right: Europe's primary problem isn't refugees, it's the terrorists the EU is complicit in creating, supporting, arming and training. These terrorists don't even require the refugee stream to enter the EU. They freely cross borders, and the security services know who they are yet do nothing. Gee, you'd think they were being handled - deliberately allowed free passage. None of this would be an issue if the U.S. and their groveling vassals had stayed out of the Middle East, left the secular regimes there alone, and refused to support radical jihadi groups. But what's done is done, and the EU is getting a taste of what the big wheel of life brings you: consequences.
Movie goers might recognise the storyline used in films where terrorists leave the building pretending to be hostages.
Meanwhile the farmer shepherds his flock.
The politically correct attitude of charitable, kind and trusting people is to be hospitable and welcoming and feel compassion for the apparent plight of so many, especially children, nevertheless Europeans are entitled to feel worried. R experience has proved that it is difficult to integrate so many unlike-minded people who come from a completely different background with alien traditions, fashion, culture, history, legal structure, social norms and religion. In order to feel at home the immigrants gravitate towards each other and hold on to their way of living, like expats. Bringing such diametrically opposed cultures together is awkward unless the immigrants are prepared to accept western norms.
Now might be the time for different countries to define their values and create a unified vision and a plan of action for their long-term future direction, which both the existing society and immigrants would be required to sign up to.