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TERROR WARS
US steps up efforts to target extremists at home
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Sept 15, 2014


Norway mulls contribution to anti-IS force
Oslo (AFP) Sept 15, 2014 - Norway said Monday it was considering making a military contribution to the US-led coalition against the Islamic State jihadist group including providing training assistance for armed forces.

"First of all we have identified additional efforts in the humanitarian field," Foreign Minister Boerge Brende told Norwegian daily Verdens Gang.

"But we have an ongoing evaluation whether we could go beyond humanitarian help to also participate in building military capacities," he added, signalling an apparent change in position.

According to Brende, the Norwegian contribution could involve training assistance for military personnel, depending on what requests Oslo received and subject to a debate in parliament.

He made the comments ahead of an international conference on security in Iraq held in Paris on Monday. Brende also confirmed to Norwegian news agency NTB that the United States had requested Norwegian involvement in an anti-IS coalition.

Brende added that the Nordic country "was not considering" air or land support in any offensive against the jihadist group, which controls large swathes of Iraq and Syria, and would not supply military materiel.

Representatives from about 30 countries and organisations at the Paris conference agreed to support the Iraq's fight against IS "by all necessary means," including military, according to the final text.

The United States announced Monday it was stepping up efforts to target extremists at home as it seeks to build a broad global coalition against Islamic State militants.

Through a series of new pilot programs in cities across the country, the goal is to create a network of community partnerships "to keep our nation safe," Attorney General Eric Holder said in a statement.

"We have established processes for detecting American extremists who attempt to join terror groups abroad. And we have engaged in extensive outreach to communities here in the US -- so we can work with them to identify threats before they emerge, to disrupt homegrown terrorists, and to apprehend would-be violent extremists," he added.

"But we can -- and we must -- do even more."

The programs -- connecting community representatives, public safety officials, religious leaders and US attorneys -- are being launched by the Justice Department in partnership with the White House, the Department of Homeland Security and the National Counterterrorism Center.

The White House will be hosting a summit dedicated to countering violent extremism in October, Holder said.

"Ultimately, the pilot programs will enable us to develop more effective -- and more inclusive -- ways to help build the more just, secure, and free society that all Americans deserve," he added.

Holder's announcement came as US Secretary of State John Kerry stepped up efforts to forge a broad anti-IS coalition and the world's top diplomats pledged to support Iraq in its fight against the militants by "any means necessary."

Last week, the Central Intelligence Agency said IS militants in Iraq and Syria now have about 20,000 to 31,500 fighters on the ground, much higher than a previous estimate of 10,000.

Among those in Syria are 15,000 foreign fighters including 2,000 Westerners, some of whom have joined IS, a US intelligence official told AFP.

The Pentagon, meanwhile, has said it believes about "a dozen" Americans are fighting with the extremists.

"We must be both innovative and aggressive in countering violent extremism and combating those who would sow intolerance, division, and hate -- not just within our borders, but with our international partners on a global scale," Holder said.

President Barack Obama will lead a UN Security Council session on the threat of foreign fighters in Iraq and Syria on September 24.

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London (AFP) Sept 14, 2014
The Islamic State's beheading of another Western hostage has strengthened the resolve of a US-led coalition ahead of a Paris conference Monday on how to jointly eliminate the jihadist group. Prime Minister David Cameron vowed on Sunday that Britain would hunt down the killers of British aid worker David Haines, an act he described as the "embodiment of evil". Britain was prepared to "ta ... read more


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