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TERROR WARS
Terrorism fears grow over Mali jihadists
by Staff Writers
Algiers, Algeria (UPI) Jul 30, 2012

disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

Western and Arab security specialists say they fear jihadists who have taken over northern Mali will turn it into a base for Islamist terrorism across the Sahel region and Western Europe.

Much will depend on whether Mokhtar Belmokhtar, a veteran jihadist and one of the deadliest leaders of al-Qaida's North African wing, is dead or alive.

Belmokhtar, an Algerian dubbed "the uncatchable" by French Intelligence, was reported killed June 25 in the battle for Gao in northern Mali between Tuareg separatists and the Islamists of the Movement for Unity and Jihad in West Africa.

If Belmokhtar, 40, has been slain, the jihadists have lost a resourceful and seasoned leader who's built up a network of alliances across the vast region over the years. He achieved this in part by marrying four female relatives of Arab and Tuareg tribal leaders who give him safe haven and logistical support.

His main sources of revenue is kidnappings for ransom and providing security for smugglers moving Central American narcotics from the West African coast across the Sahara en route to Europe.

The Algerians, who've been fighting Islamists since 1992, put a large bounty on his head. These days the French, the Americans and others are also gunning for him.

But, as the Jamestown Foundation, a Washington think tank that monitors terrorism, observes, "Belmokhtar appears to have successfully woven himself into the fabric of the region."

His regional links and tactical skills are vital for any jihadist group seeking to establish a haven in the Sahel, the semi-arid belt below the Sahara that runs across northern Africa from the Atlantic to the Red Sea.

Algerian sources claim Belmokhtar, the Algerian Islamists' chieftain in the south for two decades, was indeed killed. There's been no reliable confirmation of that but accounts of his death in battle vary only in the details.

Al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb denies he was slain but has yet to provide conclusive evidence he's alive.

On June 28, AQIM issued a communique under his nom de guerre of Khalid Abu al-Abbas but Jamestown observed that none of the events it described established beyond doubt that he'd survived.

"If he has been killed, AQIM has lost one of their most effective leaders, even if he has seemed for some time to be waging his own personal war and devoting much of his energy to lucrative criminal enterprises," a well-informed French security source said.

It's not clear to what extent this could undermine the jihadist successes in northern Mali that were triggered by the anarchy that followed the fall of Libya's Moammar Gadhafi in August 2011.

But the upheaval stirred by the Libyan war and the dispersal of Gadhafi's North African mercenaries with large amounts of plundered weapons is causing increasing alarm across the region, and beyond.

The Economic Community of West African States wants to send in a 3,000-strong military force to stabilize northern Mali before the jihadists can consolidate.

It already may be too late. Besides, ECOWAS' military capabilities are extremely limited.

Outside intervention would probably be more effective. But that would likely ruffle regional feathers, particularly with the Algerians, who especially don't want the French, their former colonial masters, involved.

Still, the Financial Times observed: "Africa should not be left alone to sort of this mess, which is a consequence of partly of the fall of Col. Gadhafi's regime in Libya last year.

"Security does not start on the French Riviera. European leaders in particular should wake up to the threat posed to their turf by a lawless region populated by terrorists and drug traffickers to the south."

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Panetta offers Tunisia help in 'terrorism' fight
Tunis (AFP) July 30, 2012 - US Defence Secretary Leon Panetta on Monday said Washington was ready to help Tunisia develop its capacities to combat Al-Qaeda, and urged closer regional cooperation in fighting the terror network.

"The US Department of Defence stands ready to help Tunisia to ensuring regional stability, to strengthen the capabilities of its defence institutions," Panetta told reporters after meeting President Moncef Marzouki.

It was the first visit to the North African country by a US defence secretary since the popular uprising that toppled Tunisian dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali in January last year and touched off the Arab Spring.

"I was pleased to begin a dialogue about how we can deepen that cooperation in the range of common concerns, counter violent extremism and terrorism," Panetta said, adding the US and Tunisian militaries "have long been partners."

"There are a number of efforts that we can assist them with to develop the kind of operations, the kind of intelligence that will help effectively deal with that threat," the US official explained.

Panetta urged the Arab Maghreb Union, the dormant five-country bloc that groups Algeria, Libya, Mauritania, Morocco and Tunisia, to develop counter-terrorism efforts to confront Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) and protect their borders.

Foreign ministers from the group, meeting in Algiers earlier this month, agreed on the need to forge a common security pact in response to the upheavals in the region.

AQIM, which stems from a group started in the late 1990s by radical Algerian Islamists and formally subscribed to Al-Qaeda's ideology in 2007, has been boosted by the political turmoil in Mali.

Security experts say the armed Islamist groups that have occupied the vast desert terrain in northern Mali are acting under the aegis of the North African Al-Qaeda franchise.

Panetta said Washington also stands ready to help train the Tunisian armed forces at an institutional level, and hailed the "positive role" they have played since the revolution.

The US official was speaking to the media during a visit to a military cemetery in Tunis where thousands of US servicemen killed in North Africa during World Word II are buried.

Panetta's one-day trip to Tunisia is the first stop on a regional tour that will also take him to Egypt, Israel and Jordan.



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US police federation chief urges stricter gun laws
Washington (AFP) July 26, 2012
A US police federation chief called for tougher checks on gun buyers Thursday, almost a week after a shooter used four weapons, including an assault rifle, to kill 12 people at a cinema in Colorado. Calls to re-examine America's gun laws have mounted in the aftermath of the massacre in Aurora, near Denver, during a screening of the latest Batman movie, "The Dark Knight Rises," that saw the g ... read more


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