Thursday, November 19, 2015

WOW: When You See How Many ISIS Suspects Have Been Arrested In The US, Your Blood Will Boil

WOW: When You See How Many ISIS Suspects Have Been Arrested In The US, Your Blood Will Boil

As President Obama has given the green light for as many as 100,000 Middle Eastern refugees to come to America — many of whom are anticipated to be Muslim men of fighting age from countries with untold numbers of radicals among their populations — this startling revelation has come to light. U.S. authorities have reportedly charged at least 66 men and women with ISIS-related terror plots on American soil — including some “refugees.” And it has all occurred in the last 18 months as the bloody Syrian conflict has intensified.

While the terror group has set its sights on the U.S., saying “American blood tastes best,” President Obama insists says that “slamming the door” on Syrian refugees fleeing their nation’s civil war would be a betrayal of our values. But an analysis by Daily Mail Online reveals that dozens of foiled plots have already involved immigrants accused of harboring sympathy for ISIS, as well as Islamic converts seduced by the group’s expansive social media campaign.

The thwarted terrorists include a U.S. Air Force veteran accused of waging war on the country he once served and a National Guard soldier who allegedly plotted to gun down his own colleagues, as well as seemingly ordinary American citizens, including a young nurse, a pizza parlor boss and schoolgirls tricked into becoming shrouded ISIS brides.

According to the newspaper report, some have conspired to travel or send friends abroad to link up with fundamentalist fighters while others have planned for jihad closer to home – with Capitol Hill among the targets for a foiled bombing raid.

Just a few of the numerous cited examples include:

  • Six Bosnian immigrants were charged in February with sending money and military equipment to extremist groups in Syria including ISIS and the Al Qaeda-affiliated Al-Nusra Front. Three have become naturalized citizens of the United States and the remaining three have either refugee or legal resident status.
  • US officials suspect around a dozen men from Minnesota have left the North Star State to fight alongside ISIS extremists in Syria – and two have been killed — fueling fears that the Midwestern state is becoming an unlikely recruiting hot-spot for ISIS, particularly among its large community of Somali refugees.
  • Cousins Jonas and Hasan Edmonds – a National Guard soldier – are accused of plotting a ‘Charlie Hebdo’-style raid on a military facility. Prosecutors say the pair planned to utilize Hasan’s inside knowledge to slaughter around 120 servicemen at the Illinois National Guard Armory.
  • Yemeni-born Mufid Elfgeeh was a naturalized American citizen running a pizza shop in Rochester, New York. But in May 2014 he became one of the first people on American soil to be arrested and accused of being a recruiter for ISIS. According to the Department of Justice he was also plotting to shoot and kill members of the United States military who had returned from Iraq.
  • When two sisters aged 15 and 17 skipped classes with a 16-year-old friend in October last year, the last thing on their minds was a Justin Bieber concert. The trio were reported missing and eventually arrested in Frankfurt, Germany as they apparently traveled to Syria to join Islamic militants. They were said to have fallen under the spell of ISIS, with its promises of dream homes, husbands and Disney-esque happy endings to lure young brides to Syria. “Social media has played a very significant role in the recruitment of young people,” warned FBI spokesman Kyle Loven afterwards. “Young, disaffected youth who exist primarily on the fringes of society – they seem to be more susceptible to this type of propaganda.”
  • John T. Booker Jr was arrested April 10 as he attempting to arm a ‘1,000-pound bomb’ hidden in a van parked near Fort Riley, a military post in Kansas. In fact, it was a dummy device supplied to him in an elaborate FBI sting. According to court documents, the 20-year-old from Kansas wanted to slaughter Americans on behalf of ISIS. He also tried to enlist in the Army, allegedly so he could carry out an “insider attack,” turning his weapon on his soldiers at a firing range or murdering them with a sword.
  • Authorities in the New York-New Jersey-Connecticut tri-state area arrested five members of an alleged ISIS cell on the eve of July 4 celebrations amid fears of a pressure cooker bomb plot targeting a New York landmark.

Obama’s plan for refugee resettlement in the U.S. could potentially add many more terrorists into this already deadly mix, which causes critics to question what the president’s ultimate goal might be.

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