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Thursday, August 21, 2014

More British Muslims fight for Islamic State than Britain

More British Muslims fight for Islamic State than Britain



t is likely that there are now more British Muslims fighting for the Islamic State than for Britain's military.
Britain's Ministry of Defense confirmed to USA TODAY that there are approximately 600 British Muslim soldiers in its armed forces of almost 200,000 people. Official government estimates put the number of British Islamic State fighters operating in Syria and Iraq at 500 to 800. The Foreign Office cautioned Thursday that it is difficult to provide precise numbers.
The militant who beheaded American journalist James Foley in a horrifying video released this week spoke with a British accent. United Kingdom Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond acknowledged that the militant shown in the video could be a British national.
Khalid Mahmood, a British member of Parliament from an area with a high proportion of Muslim residents, said government estimates of the number of British IS fighters currently in the Mideast is far too conservative. He told Newsweek magazine this week that at least 1,500 extremists are likely to have been recruited to fight in Iraq and Syria over the last three years. "There are an unacceptable number of Britons fighting for jihadist forces," he said.
Raffaello Pantucci, a researcher at Royal United Services Institute in London, said many young men facing poor job prospects in the U.K.find the IS narrative of defending Islam hard to resist. Americans who are radicalized have a long way to go to join the fray. Syria and Iraq are relatively accessible from England.
"These people can go look online and just decide to participate," he said. "With it's proximity to Europe it's just so easy to do."
Ghaffar Hussain, of the Quilliam Foundation, a counter-extremism think tank in Britain, said the lure could be empowerment for many Muslims with grievances over their treatment in a predominantly non-Muslim society.
"It makes them feel like they are part of something that is important to the world," he said. "If you feel like you don't really fit in or if Muslims are being attacked and a narrative comes along that explains all that away in a simple way, that is attractive."
Hussain said a task force was set up – called Channel – to identify people who have been flagged in schools and institutions as being at risk of being drawn into extremism. Channel then pairs them with a mentor who assesses their needs and tries to offer support. But he said that a major failing of the program is that it only works if you are flagged by the system.
"When it comes to the hard-edge, counterterrorism stuff, a lot of good work has been done by the government in terms of thwarting a hell of a lot of plots in recent years, but there are a lot of gaps outside of Channel," Hussain said. "Taking it seriously is one thing. Knowing what to do is another," Hussain said.
Hussain said that extremism of the kind that is leading British nationals to Iraq and Syria is not limited to Britain but is a Western European phenomenon seen in Holland, France, Denmark and other places. He said would-be fighters probably enter Syria through Turkey, though it's not clear exactly how.
Christopher Davidson, a Mideast expert at Durham University, said there's been a massive lack of attention to the flow of Westerners headed to the region. "As long as they have been supposedly fighting the (Syrian President Bashar) Assad regime authorities have turned a blind eye to it. Now that they are going to Iraq we are starting to experience the blow back," he said.
"This is something we have been tracking and dealing with for many, many months and I don't think this video changes anything," Foreign Secretary Hammond said. "It just heightens awareness of a situation which is very grave."
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