The Islamic State Thread

The American fear-mongering machine is about to scare us back into war again
Did you know that the US government’s counterterrorism chief Matthew Olson said last week that “there’s no credible information” that the Islamic State (Isis) is planning an attack on America and that there’s “no indication at this point of a cell of foreign fighters operating in the United States”? Or that, as the Associated Press reported, “The FBI and Homeland Security Department say there are no specific or credible terror threats to the US homeland from the Islamic State militant group”?

Probably not, because as the nation barrels towards yet another war in the Middle East and President Obama prepares to address that nation on the “offensive phase” of his military plan Wednesday night, mainstream media pundits and the usual uber-hawk politicians are busy trying to out-hyperbole each other over the threat Isis poses to Americans. In the process, they’re all but ignoring any evidence to the contrary and the potential hole of blood and treasure into which they’re ready to drive this country all over again.

Facts or consequences have never gotten in the way of Congress’ lust for war before – this political body was, after all, George W Bush’s chief enabler in Iraq the last time around – and this time it’s no different. Sen James Inhofe (R-OK) recently said Isis militants are “rapidly developing a method of blowing up a major US city and people just can’t believe that’s happening.” (Maybe because there’s no proof that they are?) Sen Bill Nelson (D-FL) said, “It ought to be pretty clear when they … say they’re going to fly the black flag of ISIS over the White House that Isis is a clear and present danger.” (Again, who cares if they’re not?)

The White House declared on Tuesday night that it needn’t bother to ask Congress for war powers, and Congress is more than happy to relieve itself of the responsibility of asking for them – or, you know, voting. Members of both parties have actually been telling the president to ignore the legislative branch entirely – as well as his constitutional and legal requirements. It seems so long ago now that presidential candidate Obama said, “The President does not have power under the Constitution to unilaterally authorize a military attack in a situation that does not involve stopping an actual or imminent threat to the nation.”

“What if it comes over and you can’t pass it?” asked Sen Lindsay Graham, as though he wouldn’t want democracy getting in the way of a nice war. The aforementioned Sen Nelson said he thinks the president should go ahead and strike Isis all he wants, but added that “there are some legal scholars who think otherwise, so let’s just put it to rest”. Those pesky legal scholars with their “laws” and that “Constitution” of theirs, always slowing things down.

Meanwhile, the media has been busy arguing whether Obama is talking “tough” enough, how closely Isis resembles the Nazis, and how much military strength the US is going to unleash to “destroy” Isis – never pausing to question whether that’s prudent or even possible (or maybe that it’s exactly what Isis wants).

How many people wake up and ask themselves, “I wonder what Dick Cheney and Henry Kissinger think about Isis?” Outside of a few TV bookers, absolutely no one does – but with war on the horizon, the nation’s most awful surviving warmongers get to go back on the television circuit and address members of Congress, explaining that, if we just drop a few more bombs, it’ll actually work this time! (Unlike all the other times.)

Thanks to this wall-to-wall fear mongering, a once war-weary public is now terrified. More than 60% of the public in a recent CNN poll now supports airstrikes against Isis. Two more polls came out on Tuesday, one from the Washington Post and the other from NBC New and the Wall Street Journal, essentially concluding the same thing. Most shocking, 71% think that Isis has terrorist sleeper cells in the United States, against all evidence to the contrary.

So where to from here? Well, those airstrikes the public have been scared into supporting, which already numbering the hundreds, will reportedly expand fast – not only in Iraq but into Syri. The White House even has shiny new euphemism for such military attacks, as the Wall Street Journal reported: “Mr. Obama could green-light the new ‘sovereignty strikes’ in his address on Wednesday.” George Orwell would be proud.

And the president is said to favor a multi-pronged approach that also relies on our “partners” – like the repressive Saudi Arabia – to train and arm the “moderate” Syrian resistance army that is fighting both Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and Isis in Syria. (Yes, that’s the same Saudi Arabia which, as the Daily Beast’s Josh Rogin reported, have been accused of funding and supporting Isis, and the same Saudi Arabia that beheaded 19 people in just the first half of August, including eight for non-violent offenses.)

It’s also strange that we are unquestionably calling the Free Syrian Army (FSA) the “moderate” opposition and putting our faith in their abilities, despite many actual experts claiming they’re far from moderate and far from a cohesive army. As George Washington University’s Marc Lynch wrote in the Washington Post recently, “The FSA was always more fiction than reality, with a structure on paper masking the reality of highly localized and fragmented fighting groups on the ground.” The New York Times reported two weeks ago that FSA has a penchant for beheading its enemy captives as well, and now the family of Steven Sotloff, the courageous journalist who was barbarically beheaded by Isis, says that someone from the “moderate” opposition sold their son to Isis before he was killed.

The only red line when it comes to Isis, or at least the red line claimed by Secretary of State John Kerry, seems to be no ground troops. Of course, there are already ground troops in Iraq, fighting alongside the Kurds – we just call them “advisors”, which is another innocuous euphemism for special forces. And as Glenn Greenwald writes, it’s inevitabley only a matter of time until there will be a clamoring from the chattering class for that, too.

So how, exactly, will the administration accomplish “destroying” Isis, when no amount of bombs and soldiers have been able to destroy al-Qaida or the Taliban in nearly 13 years of fighting? The administration openly admits it has no idea how long it will take, only that it won’t be quick. “It may take a year, it may take two years, it may take three years,” John Kerry said.

He didn’t add, “it might take another 13”, but he might as well have.

Source:
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/sep/10/american-fear-mongering-war-again-isis
 
EGYPTIAN MILITANTS PLEDGE ALLEGIANCE TO IS GROUP

Ansar Beit al-Maqdis, a jihadi organization based in the northern part of Egypt's Sinai Peninsula, has pledged allegiance to the Islamic State group.

The announcement pledging loyalty to Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi came in an audio speech posted late Sunday on the Egyptian militant group's official Twitter account and a militant website.

The unknown speaker says Ansar Beit al-Maqdis decided to join the Islamic State group "whose emergence resembles a new dawn raising the banner of monotheism."

Earlier last week, the group denied on its official Twitter account reports saying it had pledged allegiance to al-Baghdadi.

Ansar Beit al-Maqdis, whose Arabic name means Champions of Jerusalem, has claimed responsibility for a number of lethal attacks mainly targeting Egyptian security forces.


Source : Sapa-AP /gm
Date : 10 Nov 2014 09:38
 
US TROOPS IN IRAQ'S ANBAR AS ANTI-IS CAMPAIGN EXPANDS

by Ammar Karim

(=(PICTURE+VIDEO+GRAPHIC)=)

A team of US troops was on the ground in Iraq's frontline Anbar province Tuesday as Washington steps up efforts to help Iraqi forces battle the Islamic State jihadist group.

The Pentagon confirmed that about 50 military personnel were at Al-Asad air base to prepare the way for a larger contingent of advisers and trainers to assist Iraqi security forces.

President Barack Obama has announced plans to double the number of American troops in Iraq to 3,000 as US-led efforts against the jihadists enter what he called a "new phase".

Parts of mainly-Sunni Anbar province have become a stronghold for IS and Iraqi forces have been on the retreat in recent weeks, falling back to the Asad air base.

The desert airfield was a sprawling hub for American troops and aircraft during the 2003 to 2011 occupation of Iraq.

A string of battlefield defeats for Iraqi forces has led to warnings that Anbar, which stretches from borders with Syria, Jordan and Saudi Arabia to the western approach to Baghdad, could fall entirely.

Sunni extremist group IS has seized control of large parts of Iraq and Syria, declaring an Islamic "caliphate" in June and committing widespread atrocities.

Its influence has steadily grown, with Egypt's deadliest militant group Ansar Beit al-Maqdis on Monday pledging allegiance to IS.

Washington has forged an alliance of Western and Arab nations to take on the group and launched a barrage of air strikes in Syria and Iraq on IS positions.

One of the strikes on Friday was reported to have hit a gathering of IS leaders but there has been no confirmation of reports that IS chief Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi was wounded or killed.

US officials have insisted the mission will not see American troops engage in combat and are instead pushing for local forces to tackle IS on the ground.

For Syria the United States has approved plans to train 5,000 recruits from among moderate rebel forces battling President Bashar al-Assad, but Washington came under fire Tuesday for having a "confused" strategy.

The leader of the moderate Syrian opposition, Hadi al-Bahra, said no strategy to target the jihadists would work as long as Assad remains in power.

"The coalition is fighting the symptom of the problem, which is ISIS, without addressing the main cause, which is the regime," Bahra told The Guardian newspaper, using another name for IS.

"The whole operation has been confused. Air strikes will not be able to win the battle against extremism. You have to defeat ISIS on the ground," said Bahra, who heads the Syrian National Coalition.

"And you have to deal with the main cause and source of extremism, which is the regime itself."

After meeting Bahra on Monday, British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond promised London would make "a significant contribution" to equip and train the moderate opposition.

Kurds fighting the IS in Kobane made advances Tuesday in the south of the flashpoint Syrian town on the border with Turkey, a monitoring group said.

"The (Kurdish) People's Protection Units (YPG) recaptured streets and buildings in the south of Kobane, after a fierce battle against the IS that began yesterday (Monday) evening," said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

The battle against IS has in recent months overshadowed the civil war in Syria, where more than 195,000 people have been killed since the start of an uprising in March 2011.

After the failure of previous peace bids, the United Nations is now pushing a plan for what UN envoy Staffan de Mistura has called a "freeze" in fighting in limited areas.

Assad said Monday he was ready to consider such a plan for the city of Aleppo, Syria's former economic hub that has been devastated by fighting.

Aleppo has been split into rebel- and army-held areas since a major insurgent offensive began there, with near-daily air raids targeting rebel-held districts and reportedly killing mostly civilians.

The situation in Syria was part of discussions between Obama and Russian President Vladimir Putin on the sidelines of an Asia-Pacific summit in China on Tuesday, the White House said.


Source : Sapa-AFP /mjs
Date : 11 Nov 2014 13:31
 
US FORCES CARRY OUT MOST STRIKES AGAINST IS

US forces have carried out the overwhelming majority of air strikes against Islamic State jihadists since August, with American warplanes conducting about 85 percent of the raids, the Pentagon said Wednesday.

Arab coalition partners have carried out 56 out of 393 air strikes over Syria, and Western allies have conducted about 70 out of more than 470 bombing raids in Iraq, Colonel Patrick Ryder, spokesman for US Central Command, told AFP.

President Barack Obama's administration frequently touts the vital role of coalition partners in the air war, particularly four Arab states, but the numbers convey how the Americans are bearing most of the burden of the campaign.

Since launching air strikes on August 8 on IS jihadists in Iraq, and later extending it to Syria on September 23, US forces and allied aircraft have carried out roughly 9,020 flights, including thousands of surveillance and refueling runs, according to the military's latest tally.

The overwhelming majority of the intelligence and refueling flights also have been conducted by US aircraft, defense officials said.

After more than 800 air strikes over about three months, US and coalition aircraft have unloaded about 2,400 bombs and missiles, defense officials said.

The air campaign has been designed to halt the advance of IS forces while the United States and other countries arm and train Iraqi and Kurdish troops to eventually retake lost territory.

Independent monitoring groups say the strikes have killed an unknown number of civilians. US Central Command said it has yet to confirm any civilian casualties from the bombing raids.

Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Jordan and Bahrain are taking part in the air strikes in Syria and Australia, Belgium, Britain, Canada, Denmark, France and the Netherlands are participating in Iraq.


Source : Sapa-AFP /mm
Date : 13 Nov 2014 03:14
 
UN PROBE: IS COMMITTING 'CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY' IN SYRIA

The Islamic State group is committing war crimes and crimes against humanity on a large scale in areas under its control in war-ravaged Syria, UN investigators said Friday.

In its first report focused squarely on acts by the IS group, the UN Commission of Inquiry on Syria presented a horrifying picture of what life is like in areas controlled by the extremist jihadists, including massacres, beheadings, sexual enslavement and forced pregnancy.


Source : Sapa-AFP /gm
Date : 14 Nov 2014 15:23
 
Just a reminder that he remains a slapgat with no backbone. Easily the worst USA president in history! Even Carter was a shining light compared with this idiot!

Fox News are hiring I hear, you would fit right in.
 
US FORCES CARRY OUT MOST STRIKES AGAINST IS

Independent monitoring groups say the strikes have killed an unknown number of civilians. US Central Command said it has yet to confirm any civilian casualties from the bombing raids.

Source : Sapa-AFP /mm
Date : 13 Nov 2014 03:14

I am sure IS killed many more but I am also sure these idiots doing these surveys (with an agenda) will see that as no consequence as long as they can show how many innocent lives the USA international coalition killed and lets forget how many unknown numbers they saved. Same argument all over again.
 
US REVIEW OF IS VIDEO CONFIRMS AMERICAN'S DEATH
By JOSH LEDERMAN
Associated Press

The White House says a review of a new Islamic State video confirms the death of U.S. aid worker Peter Kassig.

That announcement came Sunday as President Barack Obama flew back to Washington from Hawaii after a trip last week to the Asia Pacific region.

In the video released Sunday, a militant claimed to have killed the 26-year-old Kassig.

Kassig served in an Army special operations unit in Iraq and after he was medically discharged, he formed an aid organization in Turkey to help Syrian refugees.

The Indianapolis man delivered food and medical supplies, and provided care to wounded Syrian civilians before he was seized in eastern Syria last year.


Source : Sapa-AP /aw
Date : 16 Nov 2014 22:25
 
Just saw the mass execution video on sourceleak. Two things: VERY GRAPHIC. What's worse than the graphic part is how the video is done so "professionally": slow motion, music, camera angles, the thousand yard stare at the end...they really are a bunch of perverse ****s. A bunch of sadistic ****s.
 
EU 'COMMITTED' TO TACKLING IS AFTER KASSIG BEHEADING

The European Union said Monday it remains "fully committed" to tackling the threat posed by the Islamic State extremist group after it beheaded US aid worker Peter Kassig.

EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini and humanitarian aid commissioner Christos Stylianides said in a statement that the killing of Kassig and 18 men described as Syrian military personnel showed IS's "resolve to pursue its terror agenda in breach of all universally recognised values and rights."

"All perpetrators of human rights abuses must be held accountable. The EU will spare no effort towards this objective," they said in their statement.

"We remain fully committed to tackling the threat posed by ISIL and other terrorist organisations in Syria and Iraq, alongside our regional and international partners."

EU countries Belgium, Britain, Denmark, France and the Netherlands are participating in US-led air strikes against Islamic State in Iraq, but no EU country is taking part in the strikes against the group in Syria.

A video released by IS militants showed the beheading of Kassig, who took the name Abdul-Rahman after converting to Islam, and that of 18 men described as Syrian military personnel.

Kassig's death was confirmed by President Barack Obama.

The 26-year-old was captured last year and was threatened in an October 3 video showing the beheading of British aid worker Alan Henning.


Source : Sapa-AFP /mjs
Date : 17 Nov 2014 10:20
 
GLOBAL HORROR AT 'EVIL' JIHADIST KILLING OF US AID WORKER

by Sara Hussein

(=(PICTURE+VIDEO+GRAPHIC)=)

The killing of US aid worker Peter Kassig has sparked global horror, with President Barack Obama condemning his beheading by the Islamic State jihadist group as "an act of pure evil".

Kassig's family said it was "heartbroken" by the killing, claimed by IS in a gruesome video that also showed the simultaneous beheadings of at least 18 men described as Syrian military personnel.

It was the latest in a series of atrocities by IS, a Sunni Muslim extremist group that has seized control of large parts of Iraq and Syria.

Kassig, who took the name Abdul-Rahman after converting to Islam, was captured last year and was the fifth Western hostage beheaded by IS after two US reporters and two British aid workers.

"Abdul-Rahman was taken from us in an act of pure evil by a terrorist group that the world rightly associates with inhumanity," Obama said in a statement.

In the undated video released on Sunday, a man who appears to be the same British-accented jihadist who beheaded previous Western hostages stands above a severed head.

"This is Peter Edward Kassig, a US citizen," the black-clad masked executioner says, urging Obama to send more troops back to the region to confront IS.

"Here we are burying the first American crusader in Dabiq, eagerly waiting for the remainder of your armies to arrive," the militant says, referring to a northern Syrian town.

Washington is preparing to double its military personnel in Iraq to up to 3,100 as part of the international campaign it is leading against the jihadists.

European countries including Britain and France have joined the United States in carrying out air strikes against IS in Iraq, and the European Union said Monday that it was "fully committed" to tackling the threat posed by the jihadists.

EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini and humanitarian aid commissioner Christos Stylianides said the killing of Kassig and the Syrian military personnel showed IS's "resolve to pursue its terror agenda in breach of all universally recognised values and rights".

"All perpetrators of human rights abuses must be held accountable. The EU will spare no effort towards this objective," they said in a statement.

Kassig, an Iraq war veteran, had risked his life to provide medical treatment and relief supplies to those suffering from Syria's civil war.

He founded a group through which he trained some 150 civilians to provide medical aid to people in Syria. His group also gave food, cooking supplies, clothing and medicine to the needy.

Kassig's parents said they were "incredibly proud" of his humanitarian work to help Syrians trapped in a bloody civil war.

"(He) lost his life as a result of his love for the Syrian people and his desire to ease their suffering," Ed and Paula Kassig said in a statement posted on Twitter.

Flags were to be lowered at government buildings in Kassig's home state of Indiana on Monday, Governor Mike Pence said in a statement, calling the killing "an unspeakable act of barbarism".

"Abdul-Rahman Kassig was one of us and he was the best of us. He was... admired by all as a loving son, a dedicated student, an Army Ranger, and a compassionate humanitarian who risked his life to render medical aid to refugees in Syria and Lebanon," Pence said.

During a trip to refugee camps outside the Lebanese capital Beirut in March 2012, Kassig said he found a "shortage of everything except suffering".

"Here, in this land, I have found my calling," Kassig wrote in an email to friends, family and teachers at the time.

"I do not know much, every day that I am here I have more questions and less answers, but what I do know is that I have a chance to do something here, to take a stand. To make a difference."

US Secretary of State John Kerry said that American government officials had worked alongside Kassig's family to try to secure his release.

"During his time in captivity, his family, and the entire government... worked to avoid this tragic outcome," the top US diplomat said.

British Prime Minister David Cameron said he was "horrified" by the "cold-blooded murder," which French President Francois Hollande called a "crime against humanity".

Burhan Mousa Agha, a Syrian friend who worked with Kassig in Lebanon, described him as a funny, dedicated and brave man.

"I want to apologise to his family. I'm sorry that their son died in my country, trying to help," Agha told AFP.

"They are animals, less than animals, they don't represent Islam. Peter wasn't fighting anyone, he was teaching people how to save lives."

Sunday's video was substantially different from previous IS recordings of beheadings. Kassig was not shown alive in the footage, and no direct threats were made against other Western hostages.

The video came as IS suffered battleground setbacks in Iraq backed by US-led air strikes, with government forces Saturday breaking the jihadists' months-long siege of the country's largest oil refinery.


Source : Sapa-AFP /mjs
Date : 17 Nov 2014 11:43
 
OBAMA ORDERS HOSTAGE POLICY REVIEW IN WAKE OF 'EVIL' IS BEHEADINGS
by Sara Hussein

US President Barack Obama has ordered a review of how Washington can release American hostages, as intelligence agencies investigated the involvement of Western jihadists in the beheading of aid worker Peter Kassig.

The announcement of the review came just 24 hours after the release of a video by the Islamic State claiming the beheading of Kassig.

He was the third American to be killed by Islamic State, following the deaths of journalists James Foley and Steven Sotloff.

On Monday, the parents of the 26-year-old Kassig paid tribute to their son and said they would try to "forgive" the jihadists.

In the letter from Obama, dated last Tuesday, Christine Wormuth, the US undersecretary of defense for policy, says the review will focus "on examining family engagement, intelligence collection and diplomatic engagement policies".

"The president recently directed a comprehensive review of the US government policy on overseas terrorist-related hostage cases," Christine Wormuth said in the note posted on The Daily Beast news site.

The move, Wormuth said, comes "as a result of the increased frequency of hostage-taking of Americans overseas, and the recognition of the dynamic threat posed by specific terrorist groups".

The killing of Kassig and the simultaneous beheadings of at least 18 Syrian military personnel in the video sparked global horror, with Obama calling it "an act of pure evil".

Kassig's parents on Monday called for healing and prayer as they mourned their loss.

"Please allow our small family the time and privacy to mourn, cry and --yes -- forgive and begin to heal," Peter's father Ed said in an emotional address outside his church.

"Please pray for Abdul-Rahman, or Pete if that's how you knew him, at sunset this evening. Pray also for all people in Syria, in Iraq and around the world that are held against their will."

Peter's mother Paula said while their world had been torn apart by the death of their son, they would focus on healing.

"Rather than letting the darkness overwhelm him he has chosen to believe in the good, in himself and in others... One person makes a difference," she said.

"Our hearts are battered. But they will mend. The world is broken, but it will be healed in the end."

In Kassig's home state of Indiana, Governor Mike Pence called the killing "an unspeakable act of barbarism".

US Secretary of State John Kerry also used the word "barbarism" to describe IS on Monday, insisting the world would not be intimidated in the battle against it.

It was the latest in a series of atrocities by IS, a Sunni Muslim extremist group that has seized control of large parts of Iraq and Syria.

The video showed the Syrian men kneeling on the ground each before a separate executioner, whose faces were uncovered.

Among the militants shown beheading the Syrian servicemen were some known foreign fighters, including at least one Frenchman and possibly a Briton, an Australian and a Dane.

French authorities identified one of the executioners as Maxime Hauchard, a 22-year-old from a small village in northern France who left for Syria in August last year.

The Paris prosecutor's office said "circumstantial evidence confirms the involvement of a Frenchman in the decapitation of Syrian prisoners shown in an IS video released on Sunday."

It added it was "possible" a second Frenchmen appeared in the video but said it was yet to confirm the individual's identity.

Thousands of foreign fighters have flocked to join IS in Iraq and Syria, and experts say they are often among the most violent and brutal of the jihadists.

A British-accented jihadist has been at the centre of previous IS beheading videos and appeared again in Sunday's recording claiming Kassig's killing.

The father of another British jihadist fighting with IS initially told the media he had also seen his son in the video, but later said he was mistaken.

Kassig, who took the name Abdul-Rahman after converting to Islam, was captured last year and became the fifth Western hostage beheaded by IS after the two US reporters and two British aid workers.

In the undated video released on Sunday, the jihadist stands above a severed head he claims is Kassig's and challenges Obama to send more troops to the region to confront IS.

"Here we are burying the first American crusader in Dabiq, eagerly waiting for the remainder of your armies to arrive," the militant says, referring to a northern Syrian town.

Washington is preparing to double its military personnel in Iraq to up to 3,100 as part of the international campaign it is leading against the jihadists.

Kassig, an Iraq war veteran, had risked his life to provide medical treatment and relief supplies to those suffering from Syria's civil war.

Sunday's video was substantially different from previous IS recordings of beheadings.

Kassig was not shown alive in the footage, and no direct threats were made against other Western hostages.

The video came as IS suffered battleground setbacks in Iraq supported by US-led air strikes, with government forces Saturday breaking the jihadists' months-long siege of the country's largest oil refinery.

Monitoring group the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said Monday it had documented the execution of 1,429 people in Syria by IS in the five months since it declared the establishment of a "caliphate" in areas under its control.


Source : Sapa-AFP /nsm
Date : 18 Nov 2014 06:10
 
VIRGINIA WOMAN CHARGED WITH LYING ABOUT TERRORISM

A woman faces a federal charge after being accused of promoting the Islamic State in social media and offering to help an undercover agent get a friend into Syria to join the extremist group.

Heather Elizabeth Coffman, 29, made an initial appearance in U.S. District Court on Monday and was ordered held until a Wednesday afternoon detention hearing, court documents show. She is charged with making a materially false statement about an offense involving terrorism.

According to an affidavit filed by an FBI agent, Coffman promoted the organization known as ISIS on several Facebook accounts she maintained under various names. Those posts prompted a sting by the agent, who posed as an Islamic State backer.

The agent wrote in the affidavit that Coffman talked about making arrangements for a man she identified as her husband to train and fight with the Islamic State in Syria. She said the man, who is not named in court papers, backed out when the couple split up.

Coffman offered to make similar arrangements for the FBI agent and a fictitious friend. The agent told Coffman that his friend wanted to fight with the terrorist group and become a "shaheed," or martyr. The agent said Coffman encouraged him to support the friend's plan and offered to use her contacts to help him achieve his goal.

After several meetings between the agent and Coffman, two other FBI agents interviewed the woman at her workplace. She denied supporting any terrorist groups, the affidavit said.

Coffman's attorney, Mark Schmidt, said in a telephone interview that he had not yet spoken in depth with his client about the allegations.

"As I understand it, this is in connection with Facebook and issues that arose from Facebook," he said. "To the best of my knowledge, Ms. Coffman has never left the country. I don't know if she even left Virginia."

The FBI affidavit says Coffman "is suspected of conspiring and attempting to provide material support to the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham ("ISIS") a foreign terrorist organization."

One of Coffman's Facebook accounts listed her job and education, translated, as "jihad for Allah's sake," the agent wrote. Her accounts also featured photos of the Islamic State flag and images of men holding AK-47s.

One Facebook friend asked why she posted such pictures and she replied, "I love ISIS!"

According to the affidavit, she also said she got her sister to like the Islamic State and "my dad is a little angry because I got her into all this jihad stuff."


Source : Sapa-AP /nsm
Date : 18 Nov 2014 02:09
 
SECOND FRENCH CITIZEN IN IS EXECUTION VIDEO IDENTIFIED: SOURCE

A second Frenchman who appeared among Islamic State jihadists in a grisly execution video has been identified as a man from an eastern suburb of Paris, a source close to the case said Wednesday.

President Francois Hollande earlier confirmed a second Frenchman was spotted in the video, who the source said went by the name Abu Othman and originated from Val-de-Marne.

He was seen in a video released Sunday by the IS group which showed the killing of 18 Syrian prisoners and a US aid worker.

French prosecutors had already confirmed the identity of one man in the video, 22-year-old Maxime Hauchard from Normandy in northern France.

Hollande said it was not clear exactly what role the men played in the beheadings. "The judicial system will have to establish this," he told a news conference during a visit to the Australian capital Canberra.

French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said in Paris that Hauchard left for Syria "in August 2013 after a stay in Mauritania in 2012", after reportedly becoming radicalised online.

Around 1,000 French nationals are thought to have taken part in the conflict in Syria and Iraq, with 375 currently there, the government has said. At least 36 have died.

Hollande said the issue of foreign fighters and how they were being "brainwashed" was a major concern.


Source : Sapa-AFP /gf
Date : 19 Nov 2014 10:48
 
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