The Sun – Norway mass killer admits July massacre

November 15, 2011 in Articles

*Image from http://www.davegranlund.com

OSLO (Nov 14, 2011): The anti-Muslim militant who killed 77 people in Norway on July 22, shattering a nation known for its open society, acknowledged carrying out the massacre but refused to plead guilty in his first public hearing since the attacks.

Anders Behring Breivik (pix), speaking on Monday at a court just two blocks from where he detonated a huge home-made bomb before shooting 69 people at the ruling Labour Party’s summer camp, also rejected the court’s authority to hear his case.

“I am a military commander in the Norwegian resistance movement and Knights Templar Norway. Regarding the competence (of the court), I object to it because you received your mandate from organisations that support hate ideology (and) because it supports multiculturalism,” Breivik told the court.

It was the first time survivors and the families of victim were able to see Breivik face-to-face since the attack on the
government and the ruling party for what Breivik said was their promotion of immigration.

Oil-producing Norway, home to the Nobel Peace Prize, is known for its open society, peace and relative prosperity.

The attacks sparked a public debate about immigration, security and a legal system which never had to cope with such an event.

“I acknowledge the acts but I do not plead guilty,” Breivik told the court.

Breivik, speaking at a court picketed by a group of protesters holding a banner that read “No speakers’ platform for
fascists,” attempted to address survivors and victims’ relatives but the court denied his request.

“He aimed at me on Utoeya Island. That was the last time I saw him,” Bjoern Ihle, 20, from Oslo said after the hearing.

“It is good to see he was powerless, which he was not then … He looked nervous and weakened. It was a different
experience than when I saw him at Utoeya.”

Most of the island victims were in their teens or 20s, and some were shot at point blank range or while trying to swim to safety.

Daniel Vister, another survivor, said Breivik looked weak and his rant showed he was mentally ill.

“I think that what he said there shows that he is completely mad. He is definitely not on this planet.

“I didn’t think he would look like that … He was very big then and he now looked so flimsy,” he said.

In a rambling manifesto posted on the Internet before the attacks, Breivik wrote that his arrest would open “the
propaganda phase” of his operation to ignite a war to defend Europe against a supposed Muslim takeover.

The hearing, required under Norwegian law to keep a suspect in prison before trial, was Breivik’s fourth, and as expected, the court decided to keep him in custody.

He will likely remain in prison until he goes to trial, probably in the first half of next year.

About 120 people were admitted to the courtroom, while hundreds of others squeezed into overflow rooms equipped with video links.

Breivik has been kept in solitary confinement since July 22 and has been denied visits, correspondence and access to newspapers and television.

The prosecution asked the court to ease those restrictions slightly on Monday but the judge declined. –Reuters

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NST – ‘Lone wolf’ terrorposes biggest threat

September 6, 2011 in Articles, Spotlight

Arid Uka, 21, (centre, seen from behind) waiting for the start of his trial at a court in Frankfurt last Wednesday. — AP picture

September 5, 2011 | By David Rising

Post-9/11, extremists are reaching out through the Internet and radicalising a new generation of recruits in the West who often go out and strike alone, says DAVID RISING

AFTER 9/11, it was the men who went to radicalised mosques or terror boot camps who were seen as the biggest terror threat. Today, that picture’s changed: authorities are increasingly focusing on the lone wolf living next door, radicalised on the Internet — and plotting strikes in a vacuum.

The March fatal shooting of two American airmen in Frankfurt, Germany, by a Kosovo Albanian. The attempted backpack bombing on Fort Hood, Texas, apparently inspired by the deadly 2009 assault on the United States base. The foiled attack on Fort Dix, New Jersey, by a tiny cell of homegrown terrorists.
These terror plots share something in common with Anders Behring Breivik, the Norway killer who hated Muslims. They are the work of extremists who are confoundingly difficult to track because they hardly leave a trace.

In today’s transformed security landscape, authorities and experts say, the 9/11 plotters would surely have been caught.

It’s widely believed that these days there’s no way a cell involving 19 hijackers and an extensive support network could have plotted attacks in a Hamburg mosque, trained in terrorist camps in Afghanistan, and took flight lessons in the United States without being picked up by counter-terror operations.
Western authorities have infiltrated major jihadist groups, planting moles, eavesdropping on chatter, keeping tabs on radical mosques, and carrying out regular terror sweeps. Some say the tough measures have eroded civil liberties.

But lone wolves or small homegrown cells that blend into the general population present a more slippery challenge.

“The biggest threats are people working alone or in very small groups,” said a senior German intelligence official.
Modern technology is also making things harder for authorities.

As extremists adapt to the anti-terror crackdown, they have taken more advantage of the Internet to cloak their communications and recruit new attackers.

“Before, people were recruited in mosques where you’d hear speeches — Finsbury Park or Baker Street ” in London, French anti-terrorism judge Marc Trevidic said. “Then that totally stopped. Today, there is not a single case where group members weren’t recruited on the Internet.”

“The ability to self-indoctrinate online is a big concern, because not being in a group complicates our task of surveillance,” he said. A terrorist group, he said, “is easier to monitor, moves around and has meetings.”

That’s what led to the first successful attack on German soil by an extremist, in which a 21-year-old Kosovo Albanian allegedly gunned down two American airmen outside Frankfurt airport in March.

Arid Uka, a 21-year-old Kosovo Albanian who grew up in Frankfurt is accused of opening fire at the city’s airport on a busload of US airmen on their way to Afghanistan, killing two and injuring two others.

According to the indictment, Uka was radicalised over time by jihadist propaganda on the Internet. The investigation turned up no connections with any terrorist organisation.

In recent years, al-Qaeda and other terrorist organisations have been increasingly targeting people like Uka — using radicals who grew up in Western countries to make videos in their native languages urging people in their home or adoptive countries to take up jihad.

A series of German-language videos were posted on the Internet before 2009 elections in Germany promising attacks — which never happened — and US-born ulama Anwar al-Awlaki’s sermons have turned up on the computers of nearly every homegrown terror suspect in the US.

Al-Awlaki allegedly exchanged emails with the US army psychiatrist accused of carrying out the 2009 shootings at the Fort Hood military base in Texas.

Prosecutors also say an al-Awlaki sermon on jihad was among the materials — including videos of beheadings — found on the computers of five men convicted in December of plotting attacks on the Fort Dix military base in New Jersey.

“It was from 2003 to 2008 that we saw this rise in power of the tool of the Internet: first as propaganda, then to send messages and do recruiting,” said Trevidic.

Now, he said, “everything is done on the Internet, with more and more sophisticated methods, and we’ve had the possible difficulty because we were dealing with a young generation that understands the Internet by heart”.

Last month, another US serviceman was arrested for plotting a solo attack on Fort Hood — this time with a backpack stashed with explosives.

Naser Abdo was caught only when a Texas gun shop clerk alerted authorities after finding the suspect acting strangely in his store.

In the 2007 Fort Dix case, wiretaps helped authorities find out about the deadly plot to attack the base. Suspects Mohamad Shnewer, Serdar Tatar, and brothers Dritan, Eljvir and Shain Duka, were convicted in December 2008 of conspiring to kill US military personnel.

In the three-day 2008 siege in Mumbai, India, that killed 166 people, the attackers’ handlers eschewed conventional phones for voice-over-Internet telephone services, according to authorities.

The gunmen also examined the layout and landscape of the city using images from Google Earth, which provides satellite photos for much of the planet over the Internet.

But when the attacker is acting alone there is no communication to pick up at all. In the Norway attack, Breivik has claimed to belong to a shadowy group of modern-day crusaders against Islam, with cells all over Europe, but prosecutors have said all signs are that he acted alone.

But even Breivik would have done things that could have alerted authorities, the German official said.

“It’s more difficult to find out about those people but of course we are not really helpless so we can still find them, even if it is a lone wolf,” he said.

“If you look at Norway you still have a trail — he had to get the explosives, he had to get the weapon, he had to train with the weapon, he had to get the explosives into the city.

“So even if a terrorist is alone he needs some logistical preparation so we have to be more aware of those tracks, and the Internet is one of them, one of the most important.” — AP

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NST – The worst week of a lifetime?

August 17, 2011 in Articles

*Credit to commentbook.net

August 17, 2011 | By W.Scott Thompson

PRECEDED by mindless violence in the world’s Perfect Country, Norway, where a crazed crusader against Muslims killed dozens of white kids at a summer camp, the new week with its near-historic stock gyrations and then the wild burn in the world’s most civilised country, Great Britain, I was beginning to feel that the interconnectedness of things had gone a bit far. With a woman who doesn’t believe there is global warming winning a straw vote in Iowa for the Republican nomination and a Texas governor now in the ring who likes to shoot to kill, all we can promise is a most unedifying campaign year. Is the world coming apart?

But then, I reminded myself, there were good surprises. This was the week where Bashar al-Assad’s regime approached the tipping point. It is as hateful a regime as any to be found, but we’ve all danced lightly around Syria. Practically nobody outside had an interest in seeing that critical real estate coming up for sale. The Israelis get a more-or-less stable eastern border, the Turks could work with Damascus to keep the shared Kurd minority down, and the Saudis and Iraqis were at least dealing with the devils they knew. The country is so fractured ethnically that an explosion there would make Iraq’s look pretty. Better just leave it to the minority Alawites to suppress everyone.

And then the Syrians said “no”, they were as good as the Egyptians and Tunisians, let alone the Yemenis. The courage required to go after Bashar’s family (don’t even bother with Bashar’s nice smile or pretty wife) transcends anything the region has yet seen. Who knows what happens next? But the family can’t put the genie back in the bottle. The region and the international bankers have frozen accounts and many arms conduits to Bashar, and the opposition has multiplied. If 2,000 have indeed been killed, that’s 20,000 immediate heartbreaks, 200,000 with serious grievances, and two million at least, fed up. It’s a big sea to draw more protesters from, the larger as the regime picks off still more.
Maybe the stunning British scenes are a wake-up call; the violence is said to have done STG320 million (RM 1.6 billion) worth of damage, about that of a big tornado in an American city. Conservatives are pointing their fingers at Tony Blair, who coddled blacks and the other unemployed in the mobs, they say, rather than training them for employment — and making up the deficit with yet more immigrants. And, of course, there will be new techniques that police will copy everywhere.

I know this past year I have been emphasising how resilient culture is. So be it. But cultures seem a little like a coconut. The outer shell that can make rope seems to entwine others, the copra gets mashed up via Facebook and YouTube. The delicious juice is what the culture drinks, its essence.

Anyway, there’s a range of relatedness. Because currency is the most interconnected of all, with trillions of dollars going over the wires daily, then, of course, markets catch on quickly. Especially while traders watch BBC or Al Jazeera on their huge flat screens, bad news in Japan instantly discourages investors in Frankfurt. Even little markets, like Manila’s, gyrate with the world news.
I think what we’ve found is that “connectiveness” has reached critical mass. There’s a lot more that will be connected, whether geographical (North Korea, Myanmar) or ecological (icebergs breaking up, smog from Sumatra blanketing Malaysia); it just seems at this point that bad news crowds out good news. In fact, good news is hardly newsworthy at all. So we’re not inputting women joining the information technology workforce in Hyderabad or the flaming end of the Arroyo kleptocracy in the Philippines. (And guess what? Without a state apparatus to protect her from her perfidies, she’s now living in the intensive care unit at my neighbouring hospital; her infamous husband isn’t in much better shape, as they both use health to avoid official inquiries).

Unemployment figures from the big economies are just things we have to get used to with politicians paying the price. Otherwise, “serious” states that can’t make it just have to find new ways to cope — read Greece, if it’s forced out of the union (I wonder whom its students will mobilise against in that case). But torture havens are shrinking, and anyway US rendition is supposedly no longer a policy option. Online medical records are doing wonders for doctors and patients.

And Africa is growing, these past few years, at almost five per cent a year. Since a lot of Africa doesn’t even have economic statistics, this means a number of states are doing very well indeed, at least in overall economic growth. And since China and India are for the moment quite stable, Africa is no longer a gigantic minus. Latin America is out of its funk, so it’s only the rich states that are rocking the boat, who can afford their own clean-up, and the Arabs who are changing captains, crew, and ultimately ship owners.
If we see it this way, we can handle a week of bad news. Wall Street at week’s end wasn’t so far off from a week earlier, and higher than a year ago. The United Kingdom can afford the damage and wake up to it social problems. As for the Norwegians, they still have one of the most admirable societies in the world, self-done (with a little oil help), and they can handle their grief from one absurd psychopath and move on, ever higher. Even American news may have a silver lining. A leftist Filipino, now ensconced in Malacanang Palace, said to me, on return from America, how appetising was the thought of mindless Republicans killing each other off.

I can sleep tonight.

The writer is emeritus professor at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University, United States
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The Star – Balancing the forces of good and evil

August 2, 2011 in Articles

*Photo by Paula Bronstein/Getty Images

August 2, 2011 | By Karim Raslan

Evil exists in the world, a palpable, living presence; walking, scheming and plotting to kill, maim and torture. And mankind has long been fascinated by it.

IMAGINE it’s a brilliant midsummer’s afternoon and you’re with hundreds of friends on a partially wooded island in Norway. It’s actually a political camp for the ruling Labour Party – bringing together promising young activists and party members from across the country.

But honestly, right now, that’s of secondary importance; the weather’s perfect, the sea is a gorgeous blue and you haven’t a care in the world.

Suddenly, however, disturbing news filters through the camp. It starts as a ripple and then crescendoes as news of a car bomb in Oslo (at exactly 3.30pm) some 38km away shatters the exuberance.

Text messages and e-mails flood everyone’s handheld devices. The mood darkens. There’s a sense of fear, bewilderment and worry; a bomb in Oslo and right in front of the Prime Minister’s Office? Was anyone hurt? You start getting anxious about family and friends.

Imagine a policeman arriving in Utoeya at 4.57pm. He is armed – carrying a pistol and an automatic rifle. He strides into the camp; just an ordinary Norwegian policemen, tall and fair.

Confirming the rumours about the bomb, he says he wants to perform some checks. He asks everyone to gather around him. Everyone does so immediately and why shouldn’t you? He’s a cop after all? He’ll make everything safe and all right.

Then he starts shooting; gunning down your friends methodically – individually and at times in groups. Imagine the pandemonium. Imagine the terror and the carnage.

For years to come, people will debate the causes – why Utoeya, and why Norway? They’ll discuss the geopolitical implications, the rise of Europe’s extreme right as they pour over killer Anders Behring Breivik’s racist creeds and the speed with which the international media pointed at Islamist terrorists.

However, if Oslo and Utoeya can teach us anything, it’s that evil exists in the world, that it’s a palpable, living presence; walking, scheming and plotting to kill, maim and torture.

We talk of good – of good, decent people, people who honour their parents, respect their neighbours and contribute to the community – but here in Utoeya, on one bright beautiful day, we are face to face with a monomaniac, a man consumed by nonsensical, evil gibberish, who has planned for months, if not years, to kill his 84 victims.

However, mankind has long been fascinated by evil. How else do you explain the popularity of TV dramas like CSI? Indeed, the 17th century English poet John Milton’s celebrated verse-poem Paradise Lost only really comes alive when the fictional figure, Satan, strides through his imagined world.

Moreover, we have to ask ourselves: why do we find ourselves rooting for Hannibal Lecter in Silence of the Lambs, or the Joker in The Dark Knight?

Breivik’s horrific killing spree will spark off a wave of revulsion. At the same time many will become transfixed by his strange and murderous trajectory.

Evil, we’ve learned to our cost, has no set face or form. It’s the blond Hedmark farmer and the disgruntled Gulf War veteran. It’s a failed artist from Austria and the bored, wealthy Saudi youth.

The West, and increasing the global community, has prided itself on its moral relativism. We are reluctant to judge lest we be judged. We are able to accept differences of opinion and vision.

We believe that ideas can prevail over brute force and evil intent – witness the confidence with which the Norwegians have reaffirmed their commitment to liberalism, openness and democracy.

With the month of Ramadhan upon us and a time for reflection and contemplation, it’s well worth thinking how we balance the two conflicting forces, evil and good, how we encourage and nurture one while dampening down and eradicating the other.

As I search for a solution or some measure of resolution I happened across a verse from the Quran:

“On that account: We ordained for the Children of Israel that if any one slew a person – unless it be for murder or for spreading mischief in the land – it would be as if he slew the whole people: and if any one saved a life, it would be as if he saved the life of the whole people.” (Surah 5 – Ayat 32 Al-Ma’idah, The Table Spread)

As our societies become so open and all-embracing we are faced with a myriad challenges. How can we reconcile these long-cherished notions with the astounding dispay of evil that occurred last week in Norway? Indeed these types of events will continue to occur.

Still, how do we cope when our societies produce men and women who have no other thought but utter darkness and chaos?

Justice can only be done to them in full if we can answer those questions.

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The New York Times – Killings in Norway Spotlight Anti-Muslim Thought in U.S.

July 27, 2011 in Articles, PLF News

The suspect behind the attacks in Norway said he believed multiculturalism to be a threat. Here, mourners at Oslo Cathedral.

July 24, 2011 | By Scott Shane

The man accused of the killing spree in Norway was deeply influenced by a small group of American bloggers and writers who have warned for years about the threat from Islam, lacing his 1,500-page manifesto with quotations from them, as well as copying multiple passages from the tract of the Unabomber.

In the document he posted online,Anders Behring Breivik, who is accused of bombing government buildings and killing scores of young people at a Labor Party camp, showed that he had closely followed the acrimonious American debate over Islam.

His manifesto, which denounced Norwegian politicians as failing to defend the country from Islamic influence, quoted Robert Spencer, who operates the Jihad Watch Web site, 64 times, and cited other Western writers who shared his view that Muslim immigrants pose a grave danger to Western culture.

More broadly, the mass killings in Norway, with their echo of the 1995 bombing of the federal building in Oklahoma City by an antigovernment militant, have focused new attention around the world on the subculture of anti-Muslim bloggers and right-wing activists and renewed a debate over the focus of counterterrorism efforts.

In the United States, critics have asserted that the intense spotlight on the threat from Islamic militants has unfairly vilified Muslim Americans while dangerously playing down the threat of attacks from other domestic radicals. The author of a 2009 Department of Homeland Security report on right-wing extremism withdrawn by the department after criticism from conservatives repeated on Sunday his claim that the department had tilted too heavily toward the threat from Islamic militants.

The revelations about Mr. Breivik’s American influences exploded on the blogs over the weekend, putting Mr. Spencer and other self-described “counterjihad” activists on the defensive, as their critics suggested that their portrayal of Islam as a threat to the West indirectly fostered the crimes in Norway.

Mr. Spencer wrote on his Web site, jihadwatch.org, that “the blame game” had begun, “as if killing a lot of children aids the defense against the global jihad and Islamic supremacism, or has anything remotely to do with anything we have ever advocated.” He did not mention Mr. Breivik’s voluminous quotations from his writings.

The Gates of Vienna, a blog that ordinarily keeps up a drumbeat of anti-Islamist news and commentary, closed its pages to comments Sunday “due to the unusual situation in which it has recently found itself.”

Its operator, who describes himself as a Virginia consultant and uses the pseudonym “Baron Bodissey,” wrote on the site Sunday that “at no time has any part of the Counterjihad advocated violence.”

The name of that Web site — a reference to the siege of Vienna in 1683 by Muslim fighters who, the blog says in its headnote, “seemed poised to overrun Christian Europe” — was echoed in the title Mr. Breivik chose for his manifesto: “2083: A European Declaration of Independence.” He chose that year, the 400th anniversary of the siege, as the target for the triumph of Christian forces in the European civil war he called for to drive out Islamic influence.

Marc Sageman, a former C.I.A. officer and a consultant on terrorism, said it would be unfair to attribute Mr. Breivik’s violence to the writers who helped shape his world view. But at the same time, he said the counterjihad writers do argue that the fundamentalist Salafi branch of Islam “is the infrastructure from which Al Qaeda emerged. Well, they and their writings are the infrastructure from which Breivik emerged.”

“This rhetoric,” he added, “is not cost-free.”

Dr. Sageman, who is also a forensic psychiatrist, said he saw no overt signs of mental illness in Mr. Breivik’s writings. He said Mr. Breivik bears some resemblance to Ted Kaczynski, the Unabomber, who also spent years on a manifesto and carried out his mail bombings in part to gain attention for his theories. One obvious difference, Dr. Sageman said, is that Mr. Kaczynski was a loner who spent years in a rustic Montana cabin, while Mr. Breivik appears to have been quite social.

Mr. Breivik’s declaration did not name Mr. Kaczynski or acknowledge the numerous passages copied from the Unabomber’s 1995 manifesto, in which the Norwegian substituted “multiculturalists” or “cultural Marxists” for Mr. Kaczynski’s “leftists” and made other small wording changes.

By contrast, he quoted the American and European counterjihad writers by name, notably Mr. Spencer, author of 10 books, including “Islam Unveiled” and “The Truth About Muhammad.”

Mr. Breivik frequently cited another blog, Atlas Shrugs, and recommended the Gates of Vienna among Web sites. Pamela Geller, an outspoken critic of Islam who runs Atlas Shrugs, wrote on her blog Sunday that any assertion that she or other antijihad writers bore any responsibility for Mr. Breivik’s actions was “ridiculous.”

“If anyone incited him to violence, it was Islamic supremacists,” she wrote.

Mr. Breivik also quoted European blogs and writers with similar themes, notably a Norwegian blogger who writes under the name “Fjordman.” Immigration from Muslim countries to Scandinavia and the rest of Europe has set off a deep political debate across the continent and strengthened a number of right-wing anti-immigrant parties.

In the United States, the shootings resonated with years of debate at home over the proper focus of counterterrorism.

Despite the Norway killings, Representative Peter T. King, the New York Republican who is chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, said he had no plans to broaden contentious hearings about the radicalization of Muslim Americans and would hold the third one as planned on Wednesday. He said his committee focused on terrorist threats with foreign ties and suggested that the Judiciary Committee might be more appropriate for looking at non-Muslim threats.

In 2009, when the Department of Homeland Security produced a report, “Rightwing Extremism,” suggesting that the recession and the election of an African-American president might increase the threat from white supremacists, conservatives in Congress strongly objected. Janet Napolitano, the homeland security secretary, quickly withdrew the report and apologized for what she said were its flaws.

Daryl Johnson, the Department of Homeland Security analyst who was the primary author of the report, said in an interview that after he left the department in 2010, the number of analysts assigned to non-Islamic militancy of all kinds was reduced to two from six. Mr. Johnson, who now runs a private research firm on the domestic terrorist threat, DTAnalytics, said about 30 analysts worked on Islamic radicalism when he was there.

The killings in Norway “could easily happen here,” he said. The Hutaree, an extremist Christian militia in Michigan accused last year of plotting to kill police officers and planting bombs at their funerals, had an arsenal of weapons larger than all the Muslim plotters charged in the United States since the Sept. 11 attacks combined, he said.

Homeland Security officials disputed Mr. Johnson’s claim about staffing, saying they pay close attention to all threats, regardless of ideology. And the F.B.I. infiltrated the Hutaree, making arrests before any attack could take place.

John D. Cohen, principal deputy counterterrorism coordinator at the Department of Homeland Security, said Ms. Napolitano, who visited Oklahoma City last year for the 15th anniversary of the bombing there, had often spoken of the need to assess the risk of violence without regard to politics or religion.

“What happened in Norway,” Mr. Cohen said, “is a dramatic reminder that in trying to prevent attacks, we cannot focus on a single ideology.”

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